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June 3, 2008

Gas Prices Not Just An American Problem

fishing%20boat.jpg
Did you hear about the striking Spanish fishermen? Or perhaps the disgruntled French farmers? Maybe the embattled Bulgarian truckers? All of them, and many more workers across Europe who depend on tractors, trucks, boats, and barges to drive commerce, are speaking out against the skyrocketing prices of gas in Europe, which pays about twice as much to fill up a tank than America does.

The Spanish and Portuguese fishing industry, the largest in Europe, is in fact at a stand-still: workers have gone on strike to protest the rapid increase in diesel fuel. Today's article in the L.A. Times is an important reminder of how far America's gas prices have yet to rise:

Fishermen in Spain and Portugal began nationwide strikes Friday, keeping their trawlers and commercial boats docked at ports. In Madrid, demonstrators handed out 20 tons of fish in a bid to win support from the public.

In Spain, the European Union's most-important producer of fish, the fishing confederation estimates fuel prices have gone up 320% in the last five years -- so high that many fishermen can no longer afford to take their boats out.

French fishermen and farmers, who need fuel for trawlers and tractors, say their livelihoods are threatened by soaring prices and have blocked oil terminals around France and shipping traffic on the English Channel to demand government help.


Don't forget that high gas prices also have an effect on the prices of things like food -- high energy costs and demand for biofuels are driving the prices of things like wheat and vegetable oil up as well. Although the striking French truckers are pulling crazy Gallic tricks like blockading major roadways with slow-driving trucks, at least most Europeans have reliable forms of public transportation to keep them moving -- what happens when the same thing happens in L.A.?

Photo by Chrissy Olson via Flickr.

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Comments (3) [rss]

I'm in Toronto right now and it's all anyone talks about. The cabbies are tripling rates and at the same time fighting for fares because the strong dollar and high travel prices are affecting tourism.

 

About 50 countries still have more expensive gas than the U.S.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gas_prices#Average_gasoline_prices_around_the_world

 

America's failure to utilize domestic resources raises fuel prices world wide. Reduced foreign dependence would place downward pressure on world prices by making more oil available for other countries.

The United States is the only country on the planet not scrambling to develop domestic energy resources. Congress refuses to allow drilling for huge oil reserves in the Gulf of Mexico, the Continental Shelf and Alaska.

America also has 1/4th the Earth's coal that could be used to fuel new power generation plants and to create synthetic gas/diesel like the Germans did in WWII. But this potential is likewise regulated to death.

The net result is an ever declining lifestyle for U.S. citizens and a drag on the economies of other countries.

 
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