I had a lot of sympathy for the oil company back in the Louisiana oil spill, especially those poor ole CEO's having to pay those claims.
All that anger and yet not one acknowledgement of the effect that lower oil prices are having on the sales.
It's such an odd social phenomenon when people are so rigidly stubborn that they are willing to cause themselves economic harm by avoiding any form of change.
Oh well.
I had a lot of sympathy for the oil company back in the Louisiana oil spill, especially those poor ole CEO's having to pay those claims.
No don't know much concerning that.You should get your handler to explain the last few posts to you.
PS - Love the comment about being stubborn; you define that ideal to a tee
Ever wonder how Haliburton and TransOcean got off scott-free on that?... I believe that Haliburton has since moved their head office to the UAE, but it would have been an interesting question
All that anger and yet not one acknowledgement of the effect that lower oil prices are having on the sales.
It's such an odd social phenomenon when people are so rigidly stubborn that they are willing to cause themselves economic harm by avoiding any form of change.
Oh well.
Change? Like in buying oil from your own country? Ok
Like investing in tech and education?
You prefer burning foreign oil to get to work or you don't drive because you fell for the "she needs the car in case the kids..."?All that anger and yet not one acknowledgement of the effect that lower oil prices are having on the sales.
It's such an odd social phenomenon when people are so rigidly stubborn that they are willing to cause themselves economic harm by avoiding any form of change.
Oh well.
Release Date: 2014-11-13
Despite being a major producer and exporter of crude oil, Canada also imports oil from abroad, largely into eastern Canada. This is largely because there has been little infrastructure connecting Western Canadian oil supplies to eastern Canadian markets.
Canadian crude oil imports have decreased since 2010 at an average rate of five per cent per year. In the first eight months of 2014, total crude oil imports averaged 634 thousand barrels per day (101 thousand cubic metres per day), down from over 800 thousand barrels per day (127 thousand cubic metres per day) in 2010.
Hooray for Energy East!