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Calls for New Refineries
House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., has urged U.S. oil companies to invest in building more refineries and better communicate their efforts at bringing down oil and natural gas costs. It has been 30 years, he noted, since a new refinery has been built in the United States, and extra refining capacity could prevent the shortages and price spikes that follow natural disasters.
But analyst Parry said that, although new refineries had not opened, many companies had made improvements and expansions to their existing infrastructure and refining capacity.
"Total refining capacity has been increased by 10 percent in the past decade -- that's the equivalent of adding seven to eight new refineries," he said.
Eye-
Did you read this paragraph for that 2006 article? It proves my point exactly. There is not really a shortage of crude in North America. What there is, is (oh- tortured sentence structure!) a shortage of refining capacity. In economics, when you have a situation where supply and demand are very finely balanced, any upset in supply can quickly drive prices to eye-popping levels because there is no slack in the system. Buyers will bid the price out of sight. And I have absolutely no doubt that speculators are buying contracts for the delivery of gasoline and short selling for huge profit. Mind you, they are taking a huge risk, because they could also end up holding the bag and losing their shirts.
Seriously- don't buy gas and the price will fall.