hate to say i remember gas for 22 cents a gallon.. i sound like my dad talking about cheap baby ruth candy bars..
did you know the largest use of solar energy is heating swimming pools? its certainly good for low grade energy demand..
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, one of the more common investment cunundrums is that Americans now know they need new refineries, but they aren't going to ditch their expensive SUVs and buy Kia's very much to reduce gas demand (40+ %)... so the demand side of things (oil and refined products) is going to stay high.. especialy with competing international demands from China and India.. who is going to make money?.. the oil companies or firms building new refineries or the folks transporting the fuel and speculating on its value..
Have you heard of the Arizona Clean Fuels project in Yuma which has been trying to build a new refinery for six years, and not a single shovel of dirt has moved. The company is still fighting its way through city, county, state, and federal permit procedures. remember in 2003,.. when a major gasoline pipeline ruptured in Arizona and was shut down for two weeks, causing price spikes and shortages throughout the state and region? Partly because of this event, Arizona Clean Fuels Yuma claims that there is 90% public support for a new refinery. Yet it is proving exceptionally difficult for the group to obtain approval for "the most advanced fuel refinery in North America ... producing the cleanest burning gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel that can be produced in the United States today."
If the cleanest refinery in North America cannot be built in a remote location, with 90% public support, then what are the prospects in the rest of the country? The Arizona refinery struggle exemplifies why some believe high fuel prices are here to stay for several years, it simply takes a long time to bring new refining capacity to market.
I'm involved in some new refinery work that won't come to fruition till 2010 or so.. first one to market will win.. the Valeros and ConocoPhillips of the world will continue to scoop up the old refining capacity to grow.. like in the hotel business, swapping their locations to re-depreciate costs, but it will probably be foreign refineries being built first... with products landing here, not raw oil..
like in houston this past week, if you had it, it was worth gold if you didn't, you just hunkered down and prepared for the worse the best you could..