Just a few quotes from your article TS.
" The Federal Trade Commission last month wrapped up a three-year investigation into refinery practices, concluding that it ?found no evidence of conduct by the refiners that violated federal antitrust laws.?"
"Vice President Dick Cheney frequently has blamed gasoline price increases on tight supplies caused in large part, he says, by the fact that no new refineries have been built in 25 years. In fact, 24 refineries ? many of them small independents ? have shut down since 1995, according to the Energy Department, accounting for the loss of 831,000 barrels a day in refining capacity. At the same time, individual refinery expansions have added 1 percent to 2 percent to nationwide capacity each year."
" At a House hearing on gasoline supplies Thursday, the National Petroleum and Refiners Association said both financial and regulatory constraints make it difficult to build new refineries in the United States. While refinery profits have improved recently, the group said the
rate of return on investments in refining has averaged a modest 5 percent over the past decade. "
Lets look at the price of gasoline in the 70s and 80s
doe.gov/
1998
energy.ca.gov/
California's Average Gasoline Price Hits 28-Year Low
When adjusted for inflation, the average price of gasoline in California has dipped to its lowest level in 28 years, the California Energy Commission reported today.
The average price for a gallon of gasoline in 1970 was $0.34, according to Commission figures. When adjusted for inflation, the price of 28 years ago equals $1.27 in today's dollars.
In comparison, the statewide average price for California unleaded reformulated gasoline as of March 2 dropped to $1.10 a gallon, from a high of $1.44 a gallon in mid-September last year. Some stations in Los Angeles County are even cutting prices below $1.00 a gallon for the first time since December of 1991.
Although the average gasoline price in the state has fallen, Californians still pay one of the nation's highest gas prices, in part because excise and sales taxes are higher than in most states. Oil companies also pass on to consumers their expenses in producing cleaner burning gasoline to meet more stringent environmental laws.
/www.sciway.net/statistics/ South Carolina
1986 1,661,798 1.9 0.76 -18.9
1987 1,588,587 -4.4 0.86 13.2
1988 1,564,034 -1.5 0.85 -1.2
1989 1,745,555 11.6 0.98 15.3
1990 1,805,128 3.4 1.16 18.4
1991 1,840,515 2.0 1.07 -7.8
1992 1,877,374 2.0 1.02 -4.7
1993 1,927,820 0.4 0.99 -2.9
1994 2,460,124 27.6 1.06 7.1
1995 2,450,254 -0.4 1.05 -0.9
1996 2,473,229 0.9 1.19 13.3
Look at the price in 1990 then look at the price in 1996. 3 cents higher 6 years later, can you name any other commodites that sold for the same price over that span of years.
Go whine somewhere else.