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   alt.fan.rush-limbaugh      Fans of the great one, Rush Limbaugh      278,939 messages   

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   Message 278,343 of 278,939   
   J D to All   
   Re: Gasoline-Starved California Is Turni   
   21 Feb 26 21:08:32   
   
   XPost: alt.computer.workshop, alt.politics.trump   
   From: j_d@invalid.org   
      
   On 16 Feb 2026, Promises Promises  posted some   
   news:6993c905$0$21$882e4bbb@reader.netnews.com:   
      
   >   
   > Newscum strikes again!   
   > Wonder why there is a mass exodus from CA?   
   > No you don't.   
   >   
   > "Gasoline-Starved California Is Turning to Fuel From the Bahamas"   
   >   
   >-   
   > 160000840.html>   
   >   
   > "(Bloomberg) — US supplies of gasoline are being shipped out of the   
   > country to travel thousands of miles via the Bahamas before finally   
   > ending up in California, a state battling shrinking fuelmaking   
   > capacity and high pump prices.   
   >   
   > Shipments on the circuitous route are increasing. California imported   
   > more gasoline in November than ever before, with more than 40% coming   
   > from the Bahamas.   
   >   
   > Most Read from Bloomberg   
   >   
   > A Tunnel to Transform Los Angeles   
   >   
   > New Zealand Net Migration Sinks to Lowest Level in More Than a Decade   
   >   
   > Mamdani’s Grocery Plan Takes Shape In Economic Policy Shift   
   >   
   > Texas Airspace Closure Fallout Grows, Senators Seek Answers   
   >   
   > Slums? Informal Settlements? Just Call These Cities ‘Homegrown’   
   >   
   > The lengthy journey adds another layer of cost to California’s already   
   > expensive gasoline market. Yet the phenomenon isn’t likely to   
   > disappear soon, thanks to a combination of disappearing oil   
   > refineries, a lack of interstate pipelines and a loophole in a   
   > 106-year-old maritime law.   
   >   
   >   
   > California has among the strictest environmental regulations in the   
   > US, making it costly for energy companies to operate in, though a wave   
   > of upcoming refinery closures is prompting officials and regulators to   
   > soften their stance. On average, the closures could raise the cost of   
   > gasoline for consumers by between 5 and 15 cents a gallon, said   
   > Patrick De Haan, GasBuddy’s head of petroleum analysis.   
   >   
   > After Phillips 66 shuttered its Los Angeles refinery in October,   
   > gasoline imports climbed in 2025 to the highest level since at least   
   > 2016, Vortexa data show. With Valero Energy Corp. set to close a   
   > Northern California refinery this spring, and no fuel pipelines   
   > connecting the US Gulf’s oil- producing powerhouse to the West Coast,   
   > the nation’s most populous state will likely depend on imports to   
   > bridge the gap.   
   >   
   > Under the Jones Act, any goods shipped between US ports must travel on   
   > US-built, owned and operated vessels. Those tankers are in short   
   > supply and expensive to charter. There are about 55 Jones   
   > Act-compliant oil tankers worldwide, compared with more than 7,000 oil   
   > tankers globally.   
   >   
   > “Even if there are such vessels, they would charge more than a   
   > foreign- flagged vessel would,” said Martin Davies, director of Tulane   
   > University’s Maritime Law Center.   
   >   
   > When California’s specialized gasoline trades at a premium,   
   > particularly during refinery outages, Gulf Coast refiners can capture   
   > higher margins by sending barrels west, De Haan said. Routing through   
   > the Bahamas allows them to avoid higher-cost US-flagged shipping and   
   > preserve that spread.   
      
   The California winter gas makes people sick, yet Democrats keep forcing it   
   on the public.   
      
   > In those moments, “there’s going to be plenty of incentive for PADD 3   
   > (Gulf Coast) and Asian refiners to supply Californians,” De Haan said.   
   >   
   > The trade has accelerated. Last year, California sourced more barrels   
   > of gasoline from the Bahamas than it had in the prior nine years   
   > combined – accounting for roughly 12% of gasoline arriving in   
   > California by ship all year, including direct deliveries from   
   > elsewhere in the US, according to Vortexa.   
   >   
   >   
   > Imports of gasoline were down from their fall peak in January,   
   > according to Vortexa. Japan and India both made up a greater   
   > proportion of foreign supply — though the Bahamas was the   
   > third-leading non-US supplier.   
   >   
   > Asia is a more practical source of gasoline for California, De Haan   
   > said, noting that refineries in the region already produce gasoline   
   > blendstock at the grade specifically required by California, and it   
   > can arrive without paying to transit the Panama Canal. Both India and   
   > South Korea supplied more product to California last year than the   
   > Bahamas.   
   >   
   > The economic appeal of shipping US-refined gasoline on cheaper foreign   
   > vessels has been waning in recent months, after the US eased sanctions   
   > on Venezuela, a move that triggered an increase in regional freight   
   > prices. Foreign ships, which were nearly $4 a barrel cheaper than   
   > US-flagged ones in the past year, are now barely $1 cheaper, data from   
   > Argus Media show. If freight costs continue to rise, shipments of US   
   > gasoline could become too expensive to compete with supplies from   
   > South Korea or India.   
   >   
   > Still, the Bahamian trade route, which began picking up steam in the   
   > early months of 2025, has become a key piece of California’s troubled   
   > supply chain. Already this year, two tankers carrying gasoline have   
   > arrived in California from the Bahamas, according to customs data.   
   >   
   > One of the most recent voyages was made by the Singapore-flagged   
   > Silver Moon, which delivered nearly 300,000 barrels of gasoline   
   > blendstock to the Los Angeles area in early January after loading in   
   > Freeport in mid- December. The vessel transited the Panama Canal and   
   > was consigned to Houston-based refiner Phillips 66. The company   
   > recently leased storage tanks in the Bahamas, according to people with   
   > knowledge of the situation.   
   >   
   > Phillips 66 declined to comment.   
   >   
   > Earlier this month, the Torm Dulce made the same voyage and delivered   
   > gasoline blendstock to San Francisco. The path mirrors a   
   > longer-standing workaround to bring fuel to the East Coast when it’s   
   > shipped outside pipeline systems, said Matt Smith, lead oil analyst at   
   > Kpler.   
   >   
   > “This is a trend we have seen become ingrained on the US East Coast:   
   > barrels are shipped from the US Gulf Coast via the Bahamas as a way of   
   > avoiding using Jones Act vessels,” Smith said. “It makes sense that   
   > this is increasingly happening to the US West Coast given refinery   
   > retirements and outages — and is a trend we expect to persist."   
      
   California is sitting on millions of barrels of oil.  The state leaks tons   
   of oil into the ocean every day because they refuse to pump it out of the   
   ground.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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