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Club X, Nissan X-trail Club, Philippines X-trail & SUV enthusiasts/owners sharing ideas and experiences with one another. Organizing activities to further enhance camaraderie. Updating members on the latest news related to the X-trail, the Nissan community and all SUV's in general.
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X2 VP-External

Joined: 29 May 2006 Posts: 1357 Location: Quezon City
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Posted: Sun May 25, 2008 3:41 am Post subject: How the price for crude is computed? |
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Guys, I read this from an article on CNN, you might be surprised:
It’s very easy to find out who makes money in the United States from a gallon of gas. Those stats are published every month by the Department of Energy. In March, four percent of the price went to those who transport the fuel and another four percent went to marketing; those who sell it on the retail side (it’s often said they only really make a profit from the bad food and cigarettes people buy after filling up). Then eight percent of the price went to those who refine crude oil into fuel.
The government then takes its share (12 percent is tax in the USA compared to tax of 50 percent in France and Germany and more than 60 percent here in the UK). OPEC likes to point out that from 2002-2006 the G-7 countries earned $460bn from tax on oil while OPEC countries earned $410bn from selling oil.
Now, let’s go back to that gallon of gas. The biggest chunk (72 percent) of the price is crude oil. That is where the sticker shock is coming from; $130 plus in the futures market for a barrel of crude.
So, where does that money go? BP spent some considerable time trying to explain this to me. It’s much harder to break it down because it can cost around $1 to get a barrel out of places like Saudi Arabia, while it can cost $70 to extract oil from deep water. With that in mind, BP says in 2007 it earned on average $67.35 for every barrel extracted — it rose to $90.92 for Q1 2008 – and that it cost on average $20.17 to get that 2007 barrel.
The green lobby will of course say they should spend those profits on alternatives to fossil fuels. Others will say big oil must spend more of its profits to find new sources of oil. One survey found that three big oil firms, Shell, BP and Exxon Mobil had a combined $29bn in capital spending during the first quarter of this year. But the three gave $20.7bn back to shareholders. |
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