On alternative fuels and petrol prices, Muldoon was right

Comments

[this is good]
I must agree with your statement that "Sure it was cumbersome and expensive to develop, and there were missteps along the way, but where would we be today? Certainly not paying $2 a litre" however shortsightedness and gullibility by the general public that followed the BS spewed (that every thing is OK) out by greedy politicians are to blame--plain and simple.
Interesting
[this is good]
We are awash in natural gas which has been historically underpriced. Yet few Americans have converted. Fleet vehicles are about the only segment of the transports which use natural gas.
Good read Jack. You mention the Governments need to push for new ways to produce and control prices etc. So true but this is also true. They kind of like things how they are. More $ for their bank accounts that way. Sad but true.
Bring on the car-less days, I reckon. And stop spending all that money fixing roads no one will be able to afford to drive on!
The little I know about bottled gas leaves me with questions on this article. LPG is very different from natural gas. LPG is a byproduct of the refinery process. If not sold they release it into the atmosphere. If oversold they simply wait to fill the orders until the next batch refined is in the tank. Natural gas is found underground as in ready to use in its natural state. This gas may be a natural byproduct of crude resting in its natural caches. What are the numbers of available resources for natural gas and if we start converting the huge American vehicle population, will that make the price of natural gas skyrocket? We use natural gas to heat our homes and cook our food and sometimes to fuel our electricity generators. Could this make the price of home heating skyrocket?
[這個好]
Everyone, thank you for your thoughts as I think this is an important issue.
Xmangerm: you are so very right. We were gullible, especially when LPG and CNG were effectively removed from most stations in 1996. LPG is still available at many but it doesn’t have the coverage it used to. As with many overseas countries, it’s typically used by fleets now: taxicabs and cops.
Timothy, thank you. I think your position and mine are not dissimilar on this.
Zak: exactly. It still makes economic sense today. Yet here in New Zealand we are buying LPG now from Australia and helping their coffers when we had this stuff all along!
Karlos: how I totally agree! By aligning with the interests of the corporations, our major political parties are happy. They should be less happy when they realize a lot of the electorate is moving to minor parties here.
Bridget: those were the days! You know, we lived through it and it worked out well.
Judge Bob: you have a good point but the experience of New Zealand in 1979–96 showed that the price did not skyrocket for LPG and the main rises were due to taxation (interestingly by a centre-right government). From what I understand, our LPG was not a byproduct of refining, though I am prepared to be corrected. I do recall we were making petrol from gas through a conversion process.
Whatever the case, we had the option of CNG (which did cost us in horsepower, but it was good for round-town usage) and LPG (which retained the horsepower).
The conversion was subsidized (not sure if the subsidy continued into the 1980s) but the government calculated it was better spending that money onshore than seeing more foreign exchange go to support OPEC.

Post a comment

Already a Vox member? Sign in

Jack Yan

About Me

Jack Yan
New Zealand
From October 28, 2009, I can no longer get a compose screen on Vox without waiting between 15 minutes and two days of loading and refreshing. Consequently, from December 2009, this blog will no longer be (and can no longer be) regularly updated. I’m a patient man, but having regular six-hour load times for a single web page is a bit too much. Comments are also switched off to the general public as this blog attracts over 30 spam comments daily. Please contact me at the links below.
Bebo:
LucirePublisher
del.icio.us:
jackyan
Digg:
jackyan
Flickr:
lucire
MySpace:
jackyan
Other:
http://www.facebook.com/jack.yan
Technorati:
jackyan
Twitter:
jackyan
YouTube:
luciremagazine

My Groups

Neighborhood

Explore friends, family, friends & family, or entire neighborhood.

Archives

  • Powered by Vox

Magazines