Wednesday, March 30, 2005

Gas is 5 Cents in Iraq and $2.50 in the U.S.

Gasoline costs 5 cents a gallon in Iraq thanks to U.S. taxpayers
Associated Press

BAGHDAD, Iraq - While Americans are shelling out record prices for fuel, Iraqis pay only about 5 cents a gallon for gasoline - a benefit of hundreds of millions of dollars subsidies bankrolled by American taxpayers.

Before the war, forecasters predicted that by invading Iraq and ousting Saddam Hussein, America would benefit from increased exports of oil from Iraq, which has the world's second largest petroleum reserves.

That would mean cheap gas for American motorists and a boost for the oil-dependent American economy.

Although Iraq is a major petroleum producer, the country has little capacity to refine its own gasoline. So the U.S. government pays about $1.50 a gallon to buy fuel in neighboring countries and deliver it to Iraqi stations. A three-month supply costs American taxpayers more than $500 million, not including the cost of military escorts to fend off attacks by Iraqi insurgents.

The arrangement keeps a fleet of 4,200 tank trucks constantly on the move, ferrying fuel to Iraq.

"We thank the Americans," Baghdad taxi driver Osama Hashim said. "They risked their lives to liberate us and now they are improving our lives," said Hashim, 26, topping up the tank on his beat-up 1983 Volkswagen.

The cheap fuel is spurring unsustainable demand, promoting wasteful use of energy and transportation, and squandering Iraq's oil output that might otherwise be exported, Cordesman said.

"You're leading people to buy cars that aren't affordable at normal costs," he said. "You need to move toward real market prices as quickly as you can without causing instability."

Iraqi drivers protest that the price difference between a gallon of gas in the United States and Iraq is fair, because the average Iraqi earns around $1,000 a year, a thirtieth of the average U.S. wage.

"If the price of gas goes up, we'll see lots of anger in the street," said cab driver Hashim, at a grimy filling station on Saadoun Street in central Baghdad.

Associated Press

Monday, March 28, 2005

Iran, taking economic control. Pissing off U.S.

Remember back in the 1990's when the U.S. (CentGas consortium) badly wanted to build pipelines through Afghanistan to supply Pakistan and India with natural gas and Oil? Remember that Osama bin Laden was in the way? That Afghanistan was too unstable and that it still is? Well, what if a certain country just went around Afghanistan? Iran can and is doing just that!


Who's crying now? (Bush and his oil bully cronies)


Who's gonna be Iran's BIG new cool friends now? Pakistan? India? China?


Pakistan have invited India to join them in talks, set for April & May of 2005, with the Iranian government to construct a natural gas pipeline from Iran. India is Asia's third-largest energy user and has long awaited such an invitation to join the $4.2 billion, 2,775 KM pipeline project, said India's Oil Minister, Mani Shankar Aiyar. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice responded that the project would strengthen Iran and thus negatively affects the United States economically. The so-called "peace pipeline" would bypass unstable Afghanistan entirely. The pipeline would originate near the Iranian South Pars fields by the Persian Gulf. It travels to Pakistan through Khuzdar, with one section of it going on to Karachi on the Arabian Sea coast, and the main section traveling on to Multan, Pakistan. From Multan, the pipeline travels to India's Delhi, where it terminates.


Sources:


Bloomberg, 3/28/2005

Agence France Presse (AFP) 3/28/2005
Al Jazeera, 3/18/2005
Deutsche Welle 3/11/05
TED Iran to India Case Study

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