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posted by LaminatorX on Monday December 01 2014, @07:20AM   Printer-friendly
from the you-got-to-roll-me dept.

The price of oil is now under $70 a barrel after OPEC decided it would not cut back production significantly in the months ahead and the latest OPEC move suggests that it isn’t going to reverse course anytime soon.. Now Neil Irwin reports in the NYT that the falling price of oil looks likely to be one of the dominant forces shaping the global economy in 2015. So who wins and who loses? Winner: Global consumers as anybody who drives a car or flies on airplanes gets lower prices for gasoline and jet fuel. Loser: American oil producers - One of the big open questions is just how many of the small, independent producers in the American heartland will still be viable with oil prices in the $60s rather than the $100s. Many have relied on borrowed money, and bankruptcies are possible. Loser: Vladimir Putin - Russia’s economy is already facing its sharpest challenges in years, as Western sanctions imposed after Russian aggression toward Ukraine crimp the nation’s ability to be integrated in the global economy. Russia is a major energy producer, and the falling price of oil compounds the challenge facing its president, Vladimir Putin.

Potential Loser: The environment. As a general rule, the cheaper fossil fuels become, the more challenging it will be for cleaner forms of energy like solar and wind power to be competitive on price. But solar and wind power are sources for electricity, whereas fluctuations in oil prices most directly affect the price of transportation fuels like gasoline and jet fuel. Unless or until more Americans use electric cars, they are largely separate markets, so there’s no reason that cheaper oil should cause a major reduction in investment in renewables. The average pump price of a gallon of regular gasoline in the United States was $3.12 this week, down from $3.80 in October 2012 and down from $3.70 just four months ago. In the past, cheaper gasoline has two environmentally problematic effects: It leads people to drive thirstier cars and trucks and to drive them more miles. This time may be different. The number of miles Americans drive per capita has declined for nine straight years dropping from roughly 10,100 miles in 2004 to about 9,400 miles in 2013. A change that significant suggests a change in lifestyle—one that would be hard to upend. In addition, the average fuel economy of new cars and trucks sold in the United States has increased markedly over the past decade—in contrast to the 1990s, when new-vehicle fuel economy essentially flat-lined. Today, the average new car sold in this country goes 36 miles on a gallon of gasoline, up from 29.5 mpg in 2004. "Times have changed since the dawn of the last era of cheap oil," says Jeffrey Ball. "Even assuming low oil prices are the new normal, a cleaner energy system probably is too."

 
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  • (Score: 2) by morgauxo on Monday December 01 2014, @02:46PM

    by morgauxo (2082) on Monday December 01 2014, @02:46PM (#121516)

    Ok, so gas has stopped (for now) raising in price. Maybe it has even rolled back to where it was a few years ago. So what? The price had been increasing way faster than overall inflation for the last 20 years! People here are talking like gas is suddenly so cheap we will all go buy hummers and drive them across our respective continents just for the hell of it or something. Are you kidding? Gas is still expensive!

    When I started driving it varied between about 60 and 70 some cents per gallon. Yup, just dateted myself, oh well. Older people than I tell me about times it cost far less than that. Yes, inflation means it really cost more back then than it sounds like but not THAT much! Where I am now it still sometimes hits $3!

    I think we have a lot of kids here that never knew what cheaper gas was like. I remember not even thinking about gas mileage. (that was probably bad, I don't want everyone to go back to that) but I also didn't even have to think about fuel as a barrier to travel. In my college years I could travel to places hundreds of miles away just because I needed a break and wanted to. I think some people don't know just what kind of freedom that is! Now I drive a car that barely has enough acceleration to pass a slow truck and mostly only go places I need to go.

    As for the environment, yes, burning more fuel is bad. Cars and gasoline consumption get way too much attention though. It's our electricity production that creates almost all of our man-made greenhouse gasses! Not our cars! Let's focus a bit more on energy eficiency at home and reward ourselves by driving somewhere fun!

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  • (Score: 2) by GreatAuntAnesthesia on Monday December 01 2014, @03:12PM

    by GreatAuntAnesthesia (3275) on Monday December 01 2014, @03:12PM (#121527) Journal

    Yup, I remember about 10 or 15 years ago big protests here in the UK when petrol prices threatened to go over £0.80/litre. The last three or four years prices have been hovering around £1.40, and now we are supposed to celebrate that they are back down to £1.20ish? Well fuck a doodle do.