tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3774469681419460608.post1230821874445051466..comments2023-06-24T01:19:24.380-06:00Comments on Write Ray!: Buying Back our own Oil?Ray Courtmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13643220772745933250noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3774469681419460608.post-10603714934924736042015-02-27T12:21:46.073-07:002015-02-27T12:21:46.073-07:00"Comparative advantage" -- in other word..."Comparative advantage" -- in other words, oil companies can maximize their profit margins by shipping raw materials to places where they either have lower safety, labour and wage standards (Texas) that cut costs, or where they receive large government subsidies to carry on their business (Illinois, Texas)... any additional costs, like shipping, they can download onto the consumer. <br /><br />It also helps that almost every refinery on the continent is owned by only a handful of companies, after the orgy of mergers and acquisitions over the past 20 years and the advent of "vertically-integrated" companies like Suncor or BP. There's been very few refineries built in the past 25 years, too - only one, in North Dakota, so far as I know.<br /><br />It doesn't even matter if having refineries operate in Alberta was profitable; it's simply *more* profitable to ship it to the United States and have it refined, there. So it gets refined there.<br /><br />We have never had a government which considers petroleum as a strategic resource, like potash; the priority has always been to get as much out of the ground as fast as it can be extracted, and then sold for export. If it were considered a strategic resource, then the argument could be made that it should be refined in Canada. <br /><br />But it isn't, so it won't - and one could argue that it's much too late, now.Rhyshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00933971231139659284noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3774469681419460608.post-46995875760710244282015-02-26T10:04:28.476-07:002015-02-26T10:04:28.476-07:00I won't even pretend to know what Comparative ...I won't even pretend to know what Comparative Advantage is, but if it means corporate greed and immorality, then I agree. Maybe the feds should place an additional export/import tax on crude oil destined to come back here as gasoline!Ray Courtmanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13643220772745933250noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3774469681419460608.post-56360508615434164562015-02-25T21:04:41.887-07:002015-02-25T21:04:41.887-07:00I recall this question was brought up years ago an...I recall this question was brought up years ago and the answer was it is not profitable , but apparently we could pipe it to the US or Quebec and the Irving refineries in the east and they can make a profit. Maybe we should have an oil pipeline east .<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3774469681419460608.post-34046290325490140022015-02-25T16:33:07.628-07:002015-02-25T16:33:07.628-07:00Comparative Advantage. A principle the free market...Comparative Advantage. A principle the free market relies on.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com