[identity profile] nvidia99999.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] davis_square
I was just looking at my gas bill from NSTAR and I noticed that last year, we were paying $1.64 per therm in Supply Charges. This year, those charges are 24.1c per therm. That is SEVEN times less than last year. Why was gas THAT expensive one year ago in this area and how can such wild fluctuations be allowed?

Edit: To clarify: this is comparing Aug 2009 with Aug 2008 (the NSTAR bill provides that info).

Re: The price per barrel of crude oil

Date: 2009-09-16 12:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] m00n.livejournal.com
Note: Heating fuel is more expensive in the winter than in the summer, so if you're comparing a bill from May-October now to a bill from November-April last year, the difference would be skewed even further than the above graph would suggest.

And since I always like to throw a little politics into the discussion whenever possible: this is one of the main drawbacks to the United States' refusal to tax energy to any significant degree. In countries where energy is already heavily taxed, economies are set up to treat it like a precious resource, so a doubling or tripling in the price of energy does not have the same impact on people's bottom line. Here in the US where fewer than half of all homes on the temperate parts of the country even have insulation in the walls, and the average car gets well below 30 miles to the gallon, compared to about 40+ in Europe (and not to mention that most people here need to drive to get to work), a wild increase in the price of energy is not only completely "allowed" (to quote from your original post), but it has real potential to bankrupt people in the process...

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