The majority of US refinery capacity is designed to process the heavy crude we import from elsewhere, the light crude we extract domestically is newer industry that doesn’t have equivalent refinery capacity, that’s why we export it and why we’re a net exporter overall. Our extraction and refinery mismatch is why your plan wouldn’t work. We would instead burn quickly through the < 4 months of national oil reserves we have left.
Is there much heavy crude coming out of the strait? I always thought gulf oil was pretty light and the heavy shit mostly came from Venezuela and Canada who would be uneffected by the strait being close.
It is, and most of it goes to Asia, but since oil demand is just barely met all over the world a supply shortage anywhere is felt everywhere through rippling demand. But I was just explaining why a closed-door domestic oil policy wouldn’t work in the USA despite our net export. Under any foreseeable global demand regime.
The majority of US refinery capacity is designed to process the heavy crude we import from elsewhere, the light crude we extract domestically is newer industry that doesn’t have equivalent refinery capacity, that’s why we export it and why we’re a net exporter overall. Our extraction and refinery mismatch is why your plan wouldn’t work. We would instead burn quickly through the < 4 months of national oil reserves we have left.
Is there much heavy crude coming out of the strait? I always thought gulf oil was pretty light and the heavy shit mostly came from Venezuela and Canada who would be uneffected by the strait being close.
It is, and most of it goes to Asia, but since oil demand is just barely met all over the world a supply shortage anywhere is felt everywhere through rippling demand. But I was just explaining why a closed-door domestic oil policy wouldn’t work in the USA despite our net export. Under any foreseeable global demand regime.