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To: Charles A. King who wrote (10630)7/2/1999 11:09:00 AM
From: Robert Satkowiak  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13091
 
Charles and all,

Speaking on terms of dollars, what would it take to get the machine in Charleston up and running on a continuous basis. Maybe it's time for some of us to try to raise the capital and get the show on the road.

Bill may have to give up some of the rights to the technology, but the fact of the matter is, he has been unable to make any progress.

Any thoughts?

Rob Satkowiak



To: Charles A. King who wrote (10630)7/2/1999 12:57:00 PM
From: Charles A. King  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13091
 
As a follow up to my previous remarks about petroleum prices, here is an article about analysts' projections based on current conditions and OPEC compliance.



Friday July 2, 1:06 am Eastern Time

Crude Prices Rise; Will Gas Follow?

By CLIFF EDWARDS
AP Business Writer

CHICAGO (AP) -- Prices at the pump remain cheaper during the busy
summer driving period than a gourmet coffee or some brands of
bottled water, but sharply higher crude oil prices are threatening to
change that.

The U.S. Energy Department on Thursday said gasoline prices nationwide remain only slightly
higher than a year ago going into the busy Fourth of July holiday, when millions of Americans
are expected to take to the roads.

But crude oil prices now are their highest in 19 months could force them to dig deeper into their
pockets in coming days, industry observers believe.

''Some areas could see an effect on their gas prices fairly quickly,'' said AAA spokesman Mitch
Fuqua. ''But even in the short-term, there's no easy way to predict which way prices are going to
turn. It's a wait-and-see game.''

Retail gasoline prices fluctuate based on demand, competitive issues, taxes in a geographical
region, refinery production and capacity, and both present and anticipated future crude oil
prices.

For example, prices at the pump fell nationwide by an average 5 cents between early May and
early June -- despite tightening inventories -- as driving demand remained weaker than expected
at the start of the peak summer period.

In the most recent survey of 10,000 gasoline stations nationwide, the national weighted average
for gasoline, including all grades and taxes, was $1.1960 on June 25, up only 0.58 cent per
gallon from June 13, according to the Lundberg Survey.

But oil producers this week are enjoying the best prices they've seen for crude since November
1997 amid intense summer driving demand and sharp declines in available supply. Futures
prices for August crude rose 10 cents Thursday on the New York Mercantile Exchange to
$19.39 a barrel.

The roots of the rising prices come from an agreement in March between OPEC and other key
producers, including Mexico and Norway, to cut their combined daily production by 2.7
percent, or 2.1 million barrels, beginning in April.

Some were skeptical the disparate parties could maintain such cuts since quota-busting has been
widespread over the years.

But compliance has reached more than 90 percent, which provides a comfortable cushion from
the actual production cutbacks needed to sustain prices, said energy analyst John Saucer at
Salomon Smith Barney.

''The fact is, they've given themselves a lot of breathing room and seem to be working with
levels of cooperation that we haven't seen in a long time,'' Saucer said. ''That means the bias is
going to be higher for crude, at least through the end of the year, and to a lesser extent, for
(gasoline and heating oil).''

But a similar sharp increase earlier this year was nearly erased after refiners stressed by weak
profit margins for manufacturing gasoline and heating oil also reduced their production of such
products, slashing the need for crude.

Analysts said that factor is unlikely to come into play in the future because gasoline and heating
oil inventories are shrinking rapidly, particularly on the West Coast, where driving demand is
strongest.

The current round of cuts comes on top of 3.1 million in reductions pledged over the past year --
moves that had little effect on prices at the pump amid weak demand in Asia and Europe, the
widespread cheating on exports and increased output from Iraq.

But analysts noted demand also is on the rise in recovering Asian economies, a factor that has
helped erase a year-to-year world oil surplus and could lead to virtually no supplies in storage
by year's end.

If that occurs, inventories of gasoline and heating oil also could fall sharply. That could result in
steep price increases if driving demand remains relatively strong or if parts of the world suffer
a frigid winter, Saucer said.


biz.yahoo.com

There is some actual concern in the oil industry that prices could over shoot in a buying hysteria, before higher cost sources kick in. Much damage was done to the US oil producers due to its high production costs during the long period of low prices and there could be a delay until high cost producers get back on line.

Clearly, there is more than one reason for getting the plant operating now. The sooner it runs, the more money can be set aside to upgrade the plant to the permitted level, not just to impress the SEC and the G&S insurance company. Think about that plant running at 1,000 with cheap feedstock.

Charles