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Politics : Al Gore vs George Bush: the moderate's perspective -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Hawkmoon who wrote (1314)10/5/2000 2:21:01 PM
From: pezz  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10042
 
My point was that women don't need you to tell them with force of law what is best for'em.

You conservatives is all alike get big government offen the peoples backs except if it's something you believe in.

<<I would be HAPPY to go through a step by step explanation of how I view abortion rights should be governed from day one of conception.>>

<sigh>........<holding head>.....Ron no offence but I've been around and around these things with you before. You are way too long winded for me to devote the time to.



To: Hawkmoon who wrote (1314)10/5/2000 2:57:52 PM
From: KLP  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 10042
 
Ron and All~ When Clinton released 30 mm barrels of oil from the SPR....Did he know it was going to Europe???? If not, why not, and if so...why?

Europe's Tight Heating Oil Market
Could Blunt Impact of U.S. Move
By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO and JOHN FIALKA
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Low supplies of heating oil in Europe are threatening to blunt the impact of releasing 30 million barrels of crude
from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

Europe's market for heating oil is 50% bigger than the U.S. heating-oil market, Europe's stocks are even tighter
and prices there are a few cents a gallon higher, so U.S. refiners have a renewed incentive to ship heating oil across
the Atlantic.

Further, a June fire at a critical export refinery in Kuwait continues to upset the flow of heating oil across world
markets.

On Wednesday, the Energy Department said 11 companies were awarded a total of 30 million barrels of crude
from the strategic reserve after submitting bids last week. The companies promised to return 31.5 million barrels to
the federal stockpile next year as payment. The winners included Marathon Ashland Petroleum LLC, Valero
Energy Corp. and Equiva Trading Co., the trading arm of Equilon Enterprises LLC and Motiva Enterprises LLC.

In offering oil today for oil later, the department said again it is seeking to avert a potential heating-oil shortage this
winter. Energy Secretary Bill Richardson said the administration remains concerned about heating-oil supplies in
New England, where inventories are 65% below normal levels.

Mr. Richardson called the release of oil from the strategic reserve "government at its best" and noted that the
International Energy Agency, based in Paris, applauds the U.S. action.

Since the crude-oil swaps were announced two weeks ago, oil prices have slid from a high of more than $37 a
barrel to settle at $31.43, down 64 cents, Wednesday for the November contract of West Texas Intermediate
crude.

In Europe, where storage capacity is greater, stocks of middle distillates, primarily heating oil, slid to 221 million
barrels in July, down 20% from a year earlier, according to the International Energy Agency in Paris, and the
stocks didn't grow in August. Germany has residential storage capacity of about 225 million barrels, but it has only
about 125 million barrels socked away.

"Europe is tighter than the States," said Gary Ross, chief executive of Pira Energy Group in New York. "So they
are likely to be a constant drain on our distillate supplies, thereby somewhat thwarting the efforts of the
administration to augment distillate supply by the SPR swaps."

U.S. exports of heating oil to Europe ballooned nearly six times in the first seven months of this year to about 1.4
million barrels, compared with the year-earlier period, according to the most recent figures of the Department of
Energy's Energy Information Administration. Total exports to all countries, however, declined slightly by 2.5% to
31.7 million barrels. "Europe needed the distillate more than Asia, and Asia has added substantial distillate-refining
capability, so they are more self-sufficient now," said Larry Goldstein, president of the Petroleum Industry
Research Foundation in New York.

Industry experts estimate that in recent weeks shipments have continued to pick up.

Refiners continue to be skeptical that the strategic-reserve release alone will help increase heating-oil supplies short
term. "It is not going to generate one additional barrel of heating oil," because refineries already are at or near
capacity, said Carlton Adams, a spokesman for Conoco Inc., which bid unsuccessfully for 1.5 million barrels.
Conoco hoped to run the crude through its Ponca City, Okla., refinery, which ran a record 201,900 barrels a day
the last week of September.

The strategic-reserve oil won't be unloaded from the reserve tanks until later this month or early in November. It
will be December by the time the oil is refined and shipped to the Northeast.

Major pipelines from the Gulf, including Colonial Pipeline Co., say they have been fuller than normal recently
because of low stocks in the Northeast.

EU Is Urged to Consider Adopting a More Interventionist Oil Policy

The world-wide problems with heating oil have been compounded by a devastating fire at Kuwait's Mina
al-Ahmadi refinery in late June that cut Middle East production by half. That has led European refiners to divert
some supply to African countries, including Egypt.

Asia is the one major refining market in the world with spare capacity. In Singapore, in particular, refineries are
only running at about 65% of capacity.

While higher refining profit margins in the U.S. and Europe could draw more shipments from Asia, refineries there
say they face technical challenges in meeting U.S. and European environmental specifications for sulfur content. In
the U.S., such air standards are governed by individual states, which would have to decide to temporarily relax
sulfur requirements to open the market to supply from more of the world.

An Environmental Protection Agency official says the agency is talking to states about the possibility of relaxing
standards limiting the sulfur content in home heating oil. Northeastern states have such standards, and if supplies get
tight, they could block the possibility of using higher sulfur fuel stocks intended for off-road construction equipment.
They could also block shipments of imported heating oil from being used.

Write to Alexei Barrionuevo at alexei.barrionuevo@wsj.com and John Fialka at john.fialka@wsj.com



To: Hawkmoon who wrote (1314)10/5/2000 3:06:39 PM
From: long-gone  Respond to of 10042
 
Membership Preview eco-logic
---- on-line ---- Become a member?

Thursday,
October 05,
2000

NGOs: Real Estate Agents for the Government
eco-logic report

It is widely known that federal agencies are infested with former executives and officials of environmental organizations. Secretary of Interior, Bruce Babbitt, former head of the League of Conservation Voters; George Frampton, former president of the Wilderness Society, and its chairwoman, Alice Rivlin; Thomas E. Lovejoy, of the World Wildlife Fund, Rafe Pomerance, and Jessica Tuchman Matthews, both from the World Resources Institute; David Gardiner from the Sierra Club; Brooks Yeager from the Audubon Society; John Leshy from the Natural Resources Defense Council - are but a few of the environmentalists who have occupied top-level positions in the Clinton/Gore administration.

It is widely known that many of these organizations are extremely wealthy.

It is also widely known that the federal government supplies major funding to these environmental organizations through grants and contracts. Just how much money is supplied to environmental organizations by the government, is not widely known.

A few years ago, we were able to acquire a report from the Department of Interior that covered the period from 1993 to 1995. A total of 1802 grants were made to 869 non-government organizations and individuals, which totaled $242,532,016. We found that 45 widely known environmental organizations received 611 of those grants which totaled $44,661,225. Among those organizations are: The Nature Conservancy ($4,171,81); the Audubon Institute ($4,038,695); American Rivers; Environmental Defense Fund; and other organizations whose former leaders have held decision-making positions in the Clinton/Gore administration.

It is also widely known that many environmental organizations serve as surrogate real estate agents for the federal government in acquisition of land and conservation easements.

What is not known, is the extent to which former association (cont)
eco.freedom.org