US oil firms seek drilling access but oil exports soar

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By Tom Doggett

WASHINGTON, July 3 (Reuters) - While the U.S. oil industry wants access to more federal lands to help reduce reliance on foreign suppliers, American-based companies are shipping record amounts of gasoline and diesel fuel to other countries.

A record 1.6 million barrels a day in U.S. refined petroleum products were exported during the first four months of this year, up 33 percent from 1.2 million barrels a day over the same period in 2007. Shipments this February topped 1.8 million barrels a day for the first time during any month, according to final numbers from the Energy Department.

The surge in exports appears to contradict the pleas from the U.S. oil industry and the Bush administration for Congress to open more offshore waters and Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling.

"We can help alleviate shortages by drilling for oil and gas in our own country," President Bush told reporters this week. "We have got the opportunity to find more crude oil here at home."

"As a nation, we can have more control over our energy destiny by supplying more of the oil and natural gas we'll be consuming from resources here at home," Red Cavaney, president of the American Petroleum Institute, said in a letter last week to U.S. lawmakers.

But environmentalists and other opponents to expanding drilling areas could seize on the record exports to argue Congress should not open more acres if U.S. refineries are churning crude oil into petroleum products that are sent out of the American market.

"It doesn't look good to say: 'We need more oil.' But then export the refined products that you're getting. It doesn't seem to be consistent," said Jim Presswood, energy lobbyist for the Natural Resources Defense Council.

But many energy experts say oil and petroleum products are traded globally, and it may make economic sense to export gasoline refined along the U.S. Gulf Coast to Latin America and import European-refined gasoline to U.S. East Coast markets.

"The fact is that the (United States) participates in global markets for both crude and refined products, and there are any number of variables that impact supply and prices in those markets," said Bill Holbrook, spokesman for the National Petrochemicals and Refiners Association.

The White House said it was against requiring U.S. oil products to stay at home.

"Forbidding exports of U.S. petroleum reduces the incentive for domestic suppliers to produce, and could potentially lead to higher prices if U.S. production or refining declined," said White House spokesman Scott Stanzel.

The 1.6 million barrels a day in record petroleum exports represented 9 percent of total U.S. refining capacity of 17.6 million barrels a day.

However, with refiners operating at 85 percent of capacity during the January-April period, the shipments represented a much a larger share of total U.S. oil products produced.

The exports were also equal to half the 3.2 million barrels of gasoline, diesel fuel and other petroleum products the United States imported each day over the 4-month period.

The biggest share of U.S. oil products exported went to Mexico, Canada, Chile, Singapore and Brazil.

U.S. consumers are paying record prices for gasoline and diesel fuel, which the Bush administration blames in part on tight supplies.

While the administration argues that more supplies would help to bring down prices, U.S exports of diesel fuel in April averaged 387,000 barrels per day, up almost seven-fold from 59,000 barrels a day in the same month a year earlier.

U.S. gasoline shipments in April averaged 202,000 barrels a day, the most for the month since 1945, when America was sending fuel overseas to ease supply shortages in other countries during World War II. Gasoline exports in April 2007 were almost half at 116,000 barrels per day.

Residual fuel exports in April were 377,000 barrels per day, the fourth highest level for any month, and up 10 percent from 344,000 barrels per day a year earlier.

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http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKN0...=10174&sp=true
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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since demand is shitty in the US and still good elsewhere they ship it

in malaysia i heard right now its hard to get fresh food at the various fishing towns as they won't sell it to locals cause HK and china are paying much more for it

just the markets at work

gas prices will be sub 3.50 nationwide (3.717 now from the peak of 4.114) eventually dropping a cent a day with oil decline from 147 to 113

they always slow to lower prices
 

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since demand is shitty in the US and still good elsewhere they ship it

in malaysia i heard right now its hard to get fresh food at the various fishing towns as they won't sell it to locals cause HK and china are paying much more for it

just the markets at work

gas prices will be sub 3.50 nationwide (3.717 now from the peak of 4.114) eventually dropping a cent a day with oil decline from 147 to 113

they always slow to lower prices

You know that gas was $2.85 Aug 07. $.65 more a gal even at $3.50. Gas is going down because of 2 reasons, in the fall it does and it's election time. If McCain is President look for $5.00 a gal next May.

You got to question if oil companies drill more here what makes you think that oil will be used here? We need oil now to lower the price, but oil is being shipped out of the country today. This drill here drill now it's all a scam.

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the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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nevermind the liberals just don't get it

and yes i hate mccain and bush too (liberals but of a different type)
 

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Gas is going down because of 2 reasons, in the fall it does and it's election time.

Yeah, as if presidential candidates have the power to wave a magic wand and send gas prices downward before an election. Not to mention, which party would benefit from that anyway? Or are you suggesting some sort of collusion is going on behind the scenes among the republicans and dims?


If McCain is President look for $5.00 a gal next May.

Care to make a wager on that on, say, November 5th...ie a few hours after McCain is declared the winner?
 

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Gas is going down because of 2 reasons, in the fall it does and it's election time.

Yeah, as if presidential candidates have the power to wave a magic wand and send gas prices downward before an election. Not to mention, which party would benefit from that anyway? Or are you suggesting some sort of collusion is going on behind the scenes among the republicans and dims?


If McCain is President look for $5.00 a gal next May.

Care to make a wager on that on, say, November 5th...ie a few hours after McCain is declared the winner?

If i had a choice between President or Dem veto proof congress, i'll take the congress. Looks like we may get both.

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