by threadbear » Thu 29 Sep 2005, 16:00:17
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'R')efineries have been so competitive in recent years that smaller refiners have been driven out of business by bigger, more efficient ones. This is why no new refineries have been built in 29 years.
The fact that refiners are actually shutting down refineries, and not building new ones, while they consolidate and make record profits, supports the criticism of "free market" corporate control of essential good and services, (certainly for the sustainable long term). Your post illustrates how market forces can hold forces down for a time. Refiners and producers, heavily subsidized by the American military, kept prices too low for too long. We are now living through the other end of distortion with real geological constraints thrown in, for good measure.
To answer another poster--it's in the big refiners best interest that local, state and federal, have past bills that discourage investment in new refinery capacity. This provides the perfect arena to minimize the impact of random events while enhancing the ability to collude and conspire.
I'm just hoping I have the good sense and intuition to disinvest before the trickster and serendipity join forces to take these twerps down.