โSep-12-2022 07:12 AM
โSep-16-2022 07:34 AM
Michelle.S wrote:
I think that's 3B, B as billion.
โSep-16-2022 06:55 AM
โSep-16-2022 04:54 AM
afidel wrote:
As far as heating oil is concerned, in 2020 residential use was about 3B gallons, about 1/4th of what it was in the late 70s
โSep-16-2022 04:14 AM
โSep-15-2022 05:43 PM
โSep-13-2022 08:10 AM
JaxDad wrote:markchengr wrote:
A 42 gallon barrel of crude oil yields approx 20 gallons of gasoline and only about 10 gallons of diesel. In the past several decades, the demand for diesel has has grown more, relatively, than the demand for gasoline. It's a supply and demand thing.
Thatโs not quite accurate, a barrel of crude yields between 11 and 12 gallons of ULS diesel.
The other factor, albeit a small one, is that the Federal tax on diesel is 1/3rd higher on diesel than it is on gasoline.
There is also the seasonal demands which are opposite, people travel more in the summer and so use more gasoline, in the winter diesel is competing with consumption for heating as well as for motor fuel.
โSep-12-2022 08:30 PM
Thermoguy wrote:
Traveled to eastern WA this weekend - Diesel was $5.39 - Drove a couple miles into OR, $4.71. Filled up, now back on the west side, $5.59. Gas is about $1 cheaper than Diesel. What I see is that diesel moves up and down slower than gas. It should be cheaper than gas and was when gas prices started to go up, but then it went up higher. Slower to go back down. Hopefully gas prices stay down regardless of who's in the white house.
โSep-12-2022 07:42 PM
valhalla360 wrote:
It's a market thing.
Diesel is primarily serving commercial operators. They have to buy X gallons per week regardless of the price. Efficiency is always important. Even with low fuel prices, fuel is still a major cost of business. The result is diesel prices tend to be inelastic. That means they tend to be slower to go up and down.
Gasoline is primarily used by private individuals. Particularly when fuel prices are low, they tend to be less focused on efficiency, so when prices rise, they have more ability to reduce consumption. It could be as simple as easing off the throttle. It could be taking the compact car instead of the big truck. It could be skipping an optional trip. With a major price spike like we just went thru, it's not hard for a typical family to cut 10-30% off their gasoline consumption. The result is gasoline prices tend to be more elastic and thus go up and down faster as they try to react to the changes in demand.
โSep-12-2022 06:02 PM
โSep-12-2022 05:31 PM
โSep-12-2022 05:23 PM
โSep-12-2022 04:27 PM
markchengr wrote:
A 42 gallon barrel of crude oil yields approx 20 gallons of gasoline and only about 10 gallons of diesel. In the past several decades, the demand for diesel has has grown more, relatively, than the demand for gasoline. It's a supply and demand thing.
โSep-12-2022 03:19 PM
โSep-12-2022 03:04 PM