Gas... and mass transit.
Aug. 31st, 2005 01:04 pmGas is now hovering $3 here in Maryland, and predicted to go to $3.50 (and that's for one gallon). It makes me wonder...
$3.50 for a gallon of gas. That's $52.50 for a 15 gallon tank -- and I belive you have to fill up at least twice, if not three times, a month.
Compare with mass transit. In Maryland, $3.50 is an all-day pass on most transit systems. A monthly pass is $64 flat -- that's 18 and nearly a third gallons, and you get to travel EVERYWHERE that's covered. If you reduce your fillups to like 1-2 a month just by doing that, then you're set!
$3.50 for a gallon of gas. That's $52.50 for a 15 gallon tank -- and I belive you have to fill up at least twice, if not three times, a month.
Compare with mass transit. In Maryland, $3.50 is an all-day pass on most transit systems. A monthly pass is $64 flat -- that's 18 and nearly a third gallons, and you get to travel EVERYWHERE that's covered. If you reduce your fillups to like 1-2 a month just by doing that, then you're set!
no subject
Date: 2005-09-01 03:12 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-09-02 06:15 pm (UTC)It's not the oil industry who is at fault for the lack of alternative energy sources. Oil and Gasoline are Commodity products whose prices are pretty much set by supply and demand. The only reason we don't have alternate forms of power that are viable is because the companies researching and developing these forms haven't found a way to make them competitive against the low prices of gasoline and worth the investment by the consumers. They're simply too expensive compared to gasoline. Now that gasoline prices are climbing, expect to see alternate forms of energy get a push. Sooner or later they WILL be cheaper than gasoline.