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		|  11-08-2022, 14:46 | #886 |  
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				Re: The energy crisis
			 
 
			
			
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					Originally Posted by 1andrew1  He's coming up with a solution to the problem which you're not. If they cannot afford it, he's offering to nationalise them. That would settle your argument conclusively. |  How would nationalising them solve anything? Any nationalised business would still have to pay high prices for the energy. 
Still doesn't change the FACT, that almost everybody is under the impression that the suppliers are making "massive profits". So are they or aren't they?
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		|  11-08-2022, 15:00 | #887 |  
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				Re: The energy crisis
			 
 
			
			
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					Originally Posted by nomadking  How would nationalising them solve anything? Any nationalised business would still have to pay high prices for the energy.Still doesn't change the FACT, that almost everybody is under the impression that the suppliers are making "massive profits". So are they or aren't they?
 |  How would YOU help people who are struggling at the moment and those who are going to struggle when the cap goes up again in October and January as it seems more than likely to do?
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		|  11-08-2022, 15:46 | #888 |  
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				Re: The energy crisis
			 
 
			
			
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					Originally Posted by GrimUpNorth  How would YOU help people who are struggling at the moment and those who are going to struggle when the cap goes up again in October and January as it seems more than likely to do? |  That's the key question.
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		|  11-08-2022, 16:33 | #889 |  
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					Originally Posted by GrimUpNorth  How would YOU help people who are struggling at the moment and those who are going to struggle when the cap goes up again in October and January as it seems more than likely to do? |   To begin with, STOP PEOPLE, ESPECIALLY THE MEDIA, TELLING LIES. 
People should not be under the FALSE impression, that the suppliers are making massive profits, and can therefore reduce their prices. The TRUTH seems to be an antiquated concept. 
Far too late to do things such as nuclear energy and fracking. 
If there is meant to be a shortage of gas, who exactly is going without?
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		|  11-08-2022, 16:46 | #890 |  
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					Originally Posted by Hugh  The clue might be in the name - O rganization of the P etroleum E xporting C ountries    
They are Oil/Petroleum, not Gas... |  
	Quote: 
	
		| Gas prices are largely controlled by OPEC, or the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, an organization that includes Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Venezuela. |  |  
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		|  11-08-2022, 16:47 | #891 |  
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				Re: The energy crisis
			 
 
			
			
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					Originally Posted by nomadking  To begin with, STOP PEOPLE, ESPECIALLY THE MEDIA, TELLING LIES.People should not be under the FALSE impression, that the suppliers are making massive profits, and can therefore reduce their prices. The TRUTH seems to be an antiquated concept.
 Far too late to do things such as nuclear energy and fracking.
 If there is meant to be a shortage of gas, who exactly is going without?
 |  I'm not sure any of the above helps the man on the Clapham Omnibus pay his bills.
		 
				 Last edited by 1andrew1; 11-08-2022 at 17:00.
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		|  11-08-2022, 17:08 | #892 |  
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				Re: The energy crisis
			 
 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Taf  
	Quote: 
	
		| Originally Posted by Hugh  View Post 
 The clue might be in the name - Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
 
 They are Oil/Petroleum, not Gas...
 |  
	Quote: 
	
		| Gas prices are largely controlled by OPEC, or the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, an organization that includes Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Venezuela. |  |  
You appear to have sourced that quote from here
https://www.wise-geek.com/how-does-o...er%20of%20OPEC .
 
	Quote: 
	
		| Americans drive three trillion miles a year, equal to 820 trips between Pluto and the sun. The United States uses 178 million gallons of gasoline a day. A spike in gas prices affects everything from the cost of bread to the amount of taxes available for community needs. A sharp rise or fall, instead of more gradual movement, can have a huge impact on the world's economy. Gas prices are largely controlled by OPEC, or the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, an organization that includes Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Venezuela. |  They are using the US terminology for petrol…
		 
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		|  11-08-2022, 17:10 | #893 |  
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				Re: The energy crisis
			 
 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by nomadking  To begin with, STOP PEOPLE, ESPECIALLY THE MEDIA, TELLING LIES.People should not be under the FALSE impression, that the suppliers are making massive profits, and can therefore reduce their prices. The TRUTH seems to be an antiquated concept.
 Far too late to do things such as nuclear energy and fracking.
 If there is meant to be a shortage of gas, who exactly is going without?
 |  All very nice, but I'm still wondering how would YOU help people who are struggling at the moment and those who are going to struggle when the cap goes up again in October and January as it seems more than likely to do?
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		|  11-08-2022, 17:12 | #894 |  
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					Originally Posted by 1andrew1  I'm not sure any of the above helps the man on the Clapham Omnibus pay his bills. |   Well nationalising the energy suppliers won't either. 
So the question, unsurprisingly still remains, of what massive profits are the suppliers making that they could possibly reduce prices? 
My last sentence of my previous post, poses an important question. Is anybody going without energy, because others have bought it all up at high prices?
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		|  11-08-2022, 17:20 | #895 |  
	| laeva recumbens anguis Cable Forum Team 
				 
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				Re: The energy crisis
			 
 
			
			https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1...728988673.html
	Quote: 
	
		| In 2015 the National Grid commissioned a study into potential effects of Brexit on Energy supply in the UK. 
 It was published in March 2016.
 
 It formed the basis of their submission to the Energy and Climate Change Committee Inquiry: Leaving the EU: implications for UK energy policy.
 
 IT says if we leave the IEM (Internal Energy Market) we get a bunch of problems to do with decreased market coupling / trading / investment an higher costs / lower energy security.
 
 But on the bright side, it says the risks [of running out of] gas are minimal... because the UK has excess storage capacity.
 
 They wrote this in 2015.
 
 
  
 Then in 2017 the Tory Government allowed  Centrica to close down 70% of the UK's gas storage capacity.
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		|  11-08-2022, 17:24 | #896 |  
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					Originally Posted by GrimUpNorth  All very nice, but I'm still wondering how would YOU help people who are struggling at the moment and those who are going to struggle when the cap goes up again in October and January as it seems more than likely to do? |   The first step to potentially solving a problem, is to actually properly understand it. That involves not allowing people to be fed fake news.
 
To understand it, you would have to accept that nationalising anything that moves, will not solve anything. Private companies tend to go to greater lengths to buy things at as low a price as possible. A nationalised business isn't going to magically lower costs.
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		|  11-08-2022, 17:53 | #897 |  
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					Originally Posted by nomadking  Well nationalising the energy suppliers won't either. |  If you nationalise them then you can, as Gordon Brown has described. It should be a last case scenario. 
 ---------- Post added at 16:53 ---------- Previous post was at 16:36 ----------
 
 
 
	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Hugh   |  It's clear market and regulatory failure here, isn't it? There was no business case for Centrica to maintain storage at the time and no strategic requirement from the regulator to fund it.
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		|  11-08-2022, 18:40 | #898 |  
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				Re: The energy crisis
			 
 
			
			A sure fire sign someone is on solid ground is capitalising the word TRUTH.
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		|  11-08-2022, 19:22 | #899 |  
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					Originally Posted by 1andrew1  If you nationalise them then you can, as Gordon Brown has described. It should be a last case scenario.
 ---------- Post added at 16:53 ---------- Previous post was at 16:36 ----------
 
 
 It's clear market and regulatory failure here, isn't it? There was no business case for Centrica to maintain storage at the time and no strategic requirement from the regulator to fund it.
 |   How? They still have to pay the same prices for the energy. 
With 28m households, £2.8bn would only reduce the cap by £100. How many suppliers are making those sorts of profits? 
Germany has a lot of storage, but is still having to high prices for gas, especially to refill that storage. 
 ---------- Post added at 18:22 ---------- Previous post was at 18:10 ----------
 
 
 
	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by jfman  A sure fire sign someone is on solid ground is capitalising the word TRUTH. |  So what have the £3bn profits of GERMAN company E.ON got to do with the UK? Split that up into the number of countries they do business in, and you're not left with much.
		 
				 Last edited by nomadking; 11-08-2022 at 19:13.
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		|  11-08-2022, 19:42 | #900 |  
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					Originally Posted by Hugh  They are using the US terminology for petrol… |  
	Quote: 
	
		| OPEC, like Russia, has a strong base in the gas industry, even though the focus of our Organization is on the oil market. Our Member Countries hold almost half the world's proven natural gas reserves, with the Islamic Republic of Iran and Qatar being second and third, respectively, to Russia, in global rankings. |  
	https://www.opec.org/opec_web/en/811...rld%20reservesQuote: 
	
		| The volume of marketed production was 471 billion cubic metres (bcm), with an export share approaching 20% of the world total. In addition, LNG exports alone were about 93 bcm. This is nearly 41% of the world total.
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