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Page added on February 27, 2013

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American Petroleum Institute Addresses Record-High Gasoline Prices


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American Petroleum Institute (API) held a press conference Tuesday addressing high gasoline prices and noted that more crude oil production and efficient consumption of oil products are key to addressing higher gasoline prices, API’s Chief Economist John Felmy told reporters.

“We have very large oil resources here in the United States and technologies that are making more of them accessible and economic to produce,” he said. “Given reasonable regulations, expanded access to resources on federal lands and waters, and fair tax policy, we can bring several million more barrels per day of crude oil to market. It could create more than one million new jobs, reduce our dependence on foreign energy, and increase revenue to the government by billions of dollars a year.”

API reported that as of last week, the average U.S. retail price for regular gasoline was $3.78, about 56 cents per gallon higher than two months ago. Crude oil prices are largely set on international exchanges which are determined by global supply and demand. Crude oil prices increased $12 a barrel, or 29 cents per gallon, between December and February, stated API. During that same period, the price of gasoline increased.

Due to a strong demand for world supplies, crude oil prices have increased. There’s more optimism about the global economy, which is growing faster and demanding more oil, according to the Energy Information Administration’s short-term outlook. However, crude supplies fail to keep up with the demand. In January, domestic crude oil production went above 7 million barrels of oil per day in the United States for the first time in more than 20 years but international production has been less robust, API stated.

“We have not done a good job of expanding opportunities for domestic oil and gas development in federal areas,” he said. “The vast majority of the nation’s offshore oil resources continue to be off limits.”

The organization also stated that if the United States approves the Keystone XL pipeline, the increase in capacity for bringing Canadian oil into the United States would encourage more production into Canada’s rich oil sands region. API also reiterated that if supply is increased, than demand is reduced.

“With gasoline prices already approaching $4.00 per gallon and projected to reach all-time record highs during the upcoming driving season, the economy continuing to struggle and unemployment rates refusing to come down, developing domestic energy resources is more important now than ever,” said Michael Whatley, executive vice president of Consumer Energy Alliance, to Rigzone.

RIGZONE



6 Comments on "American Petroleum Institute Addresses Record-High Gasoline Prices"

  1. DC on Wed, 27th Feb 2013 1:47 pm 

    RoFL! The inmates are running the asylum.

  2. mike on Wed, 27th Feb 2013 2:09 pm 

    They’ll still be saying this in 5 years when petrol is $30 a gallon and the worlds economies are in even further trouble .

  3. BillT on Wed, 27th Feb 2013 2:56 pm 

    First two sentences and I knew it was a petroporn article…lol.

  4. Kenz300 on Wed, 27th Feb 2013 9:37 pm 

    Don’t like high oil prices?

    Switch to one of the alternatives and tell the oil companies no thank you.

    Electric, hybrid, flex-fuel, biofuels, CNG and LNG fuels vehicles are all viable alternatives to oil.

  5. DC on Wed, 27th Feb 2013 9:46 pm 

    Lets take a look at Kenz list of ‘alternatives’.

    Hybrids-Gas-o-line Powered.

    Electric. Who makes those? Hardly anyone. Even getting your hands on an EV is no easy task. Might as well ask for an Anti-grav car.

    Flex-fool. All powered by a mix of fuels supplied by the US\Global oil cartel.

    CNG\LNG. Most vehicles powered by those 2 fuels exist in nations other than the US. The propane and CNG providers are also owned in whole or in part, by guess who. The MAJOR OIL COMPANIES. Sometimes if your not in the US, you may be billed by a NOC instead of a US for profit corporation for your auto-propane.

    There are no ‘mom and pop’ Oil companies Ken-period. I know, I sold propane for a lot of years, yes, auto propane too-and lots of it.

  6. GregT on Thu, 28th Feb 2013 2:02 am 

    If everyone switched from oil to alternates, the cost of alternates would also become extremely expensive.

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