.
.
.
. It won't amount to a hill of beans. The targeted plants account for
of US refining capacity. One plant will shut down but that was "planned" maintenance. The others will continue operating using "trained" managers.
.
.
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Back To The Bakken
Active rigs:
| 2/2/2015 | 02/02/2014 | 02/02/2013 | 02/02/2012 | 02/02/2011 |
Active Rigs | 145 | 192 | 187 | 201 | 166 |
RBN Energy:
the floating crude oil storage trade.
With crude prices close to six year lows and the futures market pointing
higher, a number of the larger commodities trading houses are buying
and holding cheap crude in huge floating tankers for later sale. For the
trade to work, prices today must be lower than they are in the future
and the spread must cover the storage cost and other expenses. Players
in the floating storage game have to be high rollers – the minimum cost
of a bet at this table is ~$100 million. Today we complete a two-part
series on contango-spread trades with a look at floating storage.
*************************
Something Doesn't Ring True
Bloomberg is reporting that a 56-year-old couple are saving $500/month in gasoline bills:
Charles and Cheryl Saul are reaping a timely windfall: an extra $500 a month thanks to cheap gasoline.
The couple, both 56 and from Emmaus, Pennsylvania, drive a lot so
filling the tank didn’t leave much room for fun. Now they’re splurging
after years of staycations, minor-league baseball games and free
concerts. In October, they visited Disney World, their priciest vacation
in ages. They’re also planning to renovate, meaning more trips to Home
Depot Inc.
Let's do the math:
With a drop in the price of gasoline from $4.00/gallon to $2.00/gallon, that means a savings of $2.00/gallon.
$500 / month divided by $2.00 = 250 gallons of gasoline they buy each month.
If their car (truck) gets a measly 20 mpg, then 250 gallons x 20 mpg = 5,000 miles / month or 60,000 miles per year.
If they are really that tight -- based on the story -- giving up so many luxuries in life -- like eating out once in awhile, one would assume their vehicle is getting at least 30 mpg.
250 x 30 = 7,500 miles/month = 90,000 miles/year.
Okay.
If they are putting 90,000 miles on their car (non-business), they got bigger problems than the price of gasoline. If this is a business expense, then there are tax "consequences." But at 90,000 miles per year (personal or business) they are buying a new car every year if the average individual sells/trades his/her car with less than 100,000 miles on it.
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Global Warming
Extreme Weather
Ice Age Now
WGN TV is reporting that the "2015 Super Bowl Blizzard" was officially Chicago's 5th largest snowstorm:
1. 23.0 inches January 26-27, 1967: The Big Snow
2. 21.6 inches January 1-3, 1999: The New Year’s Storm
3. 21.2 inches January 31-February 2, 2011: Groundhog Day Blizzard
4. 20.3 inches January 12-14, 1979: Blizzard of '79
5. 19.3 inches January 31-February 2, 2015: The Super Bowl Blizzard
6. 19.2 inches March 25-26, 1930
7. 16.2 inches March 7-8, 1931
8. 14.9 inches January 30, 1939
9. 14.9 inches January 6-7, 1918
10. 14.8 inches December 17-19, 1929
Many of these storms have occurred during a period of rising CO2 levels and after Agore won his Nobel Prize for his PowerPoint Presentation.
And regular readers know this story very, very well.
Icecap is reporting:
The theme had been snows were diminishing due to global warming.
Flashback 2000: ‘Snowfalls are now just a thing of the past’: According
to Dr David Viner, a senior research scientist at the climatic research
unit (CRU) of the University of East Anglia, within a few years winter
snowfall will become ‘a very rare and exciting event. Children just
aren’t going to know what snow is.’
The IPCC and US government reports through 2007 had projected snows
would become much less common as the climate warms especially in the
cities.
Environmentalist from Princeton Michael Oppenheimer and RFK Jr, in the
year before the Snomageddon winter both bemoaned there children would
never get to enjoy sledding like they did as young in the 1960s.
At least the RFK, JR, kids won't have to looks at windmills off Martha's Vineyard.