Whoever sent me the email that I summarised above, knows what company supplies what reseller.
So, boycotting will work. All you have to do is boycott one company. I think the biggest one was Esso, not sure. Anyway, if they supply Sainsburys or whatever, just don't buy from the Esso/Esso supplied garages if you can avoid them
They will feel the pinch and lower their price, which means in turn, their competition has to lower it's price, in order to compete.
Suddenly, our fuel costs less.
It could never cost less to make a barrel of Petrol, than it does to buy a litre, because a barrel Crude costs about $100, so a barrel of Petrol will require more than one barrel of crude, because many products are in that Crude and are separated by a fractioning column.
It may cost less (not including the Crude) to convert a barrel of petrol from crude, meaning the labour/process costs.
But then, if the cost of fuel is 70% tax, then at £1.15 a litre, that's about 35p per litre.
Actual production cost, cant be that much less than say 20p, but even if it is, a barrel of Crude is 42 gallons which is about 190L, so the actual cost of making the petrol would have to be well under 1p per litre, again, excluding the cost of the Crude.
Interesting table here guys and gals:
One 42gal gallon barrel of crude oil yields:
19.5 gallons of gasoline
9.2 gallons of distillate fuel oil (diesel fuel and home-heating oil)
4.1 gallons of kerosene-type jet fuel
2.3 gallons of residual fuel oil (used in industry and marine transportation and for election power generation)
1.9 gallons liquefied refinery gases
1.9 gallons still gas
1.8 gallons coke
1.3 gallons asphalt and road oil
1.2 gallons petrochemical feedstock
0.5 gallons lubricants
0.2 gallons kerosene
0.3 gallons other (don't ask me, I have no clue
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Avoid Inheritance Tax, by having your parents etc, sign their property over to you, 7 years before they die. Best get them to do it now, just to be safe
Fortunately, the world's single-largest oil deposit sits right here in North America. Time magazine calls it "Canada's biggest buried treasure." It's an area with up to 2.5 trillion barrels of oil, locked in Alberta sand. That's eight times the total reserves of Saudi Arabia, enough to satisfy the world's demand for petroleum for the next century.