Yeah it did, I bought a Dodge Charger with a 5.7 for the occasion and at 2 bucks and more a liter it means more deductibles for me I guess.
Whatever it costs, about $4.20 a gallon here, I’m so grateful I can fill up my tank to the top and not have to buy five dollars worth at maybe 50 cents a gallon I don’t ever bitch, moan, whine or complain about the price of gasoline.Here in Northern Illinois (an hour west of Chicago), I paid $5.05 a gallon on Tuesday. Do the gas prices curb your driving? Less trips, shorter trips? The gas prices hasn't changed our driving habits yet, but our trips out with the camper this summer will be closer to home.
The difference is we in America have oil ....and refineries. We don't have to and shouldn't depend on foreign oil, as it was prior to 2020. We are complaining because our government is putting policies in place to purposely inflate energy costs. Before 2020 I was paying 2.20 a gallon. Within one year it was up to 3.99 well before the Ukranian conflict. The war in Ukraine bumped it up 35 or so cents.I pay €2,17 a liter at the moment, about €8,80 a gallon, which is about $9.20. So I find it funny I hear Americans complain about fuel prices ?. I drive 4 times a week to work, 64km round-trip, if I take it easy ill get 20 to 22 km a liter with the small towncar we have. We are thinking about leasing a smaller electric car, the difference gets smaller and smaller in costs for driving electric vs petrol. I don't mind, we can both charge the car at work, my wife works at the office when I work from home. 90% of the kms driven are to and from work.
Edit: my habits only changed in how I drive, not how much as I don't have a option to do so.
The difference is we in America have oil ....and refineries. We don't have to and shouldn't depend on foreign oil, as it was prior to 2020. We are complaining because our government is putting policies in place to purposely inflate energy costs. Before 2020 I was paying 2.20 a gallon. Within one year it was up to 3.99 well before the Ukranian conflict. The war in Ukraine bumped it up 35 or so cents.
Oil we don't have, refineries a lot as we have the best accessible port of Europe. That fuel is so expensive is next to the "high" crude oil price (which isn't that high, has been higher but fuel at that moment wasn't more expensive ?) is it is so heavily taxed that at a "normal" fuel price of 1.50 a liter still 1 euro is tax.The difference is we in America have oil ....and refineries. We don't have to and shouldn't depend on foreign oil, as it was prior to 2020. We are complaining because our government is putting policies in place to purposely inflate energy costs. Before 2020 I was paying 2.20 a gallon. Within one year it was up to 3.99 well before the Ukranian conflict. The war in Ukraine bumped it up 35 or so cents.
That’s my prices too in Switzerland. And shocking to see @paulfg’s prices in Greece, given Netherlands probably has 4x the salaries of Greece, and Switzerland has…better not say.I pay €2,17 a liter at the moment, about €8,80 a gallon, which is about $9.20. So I find it funny I hear Americans complain about fuel prices ?. I drive 4 times a week to work, 64km round-trip, if I take it easy ill get 20 to 22 km a liter with the small towncar we have. We are thinking about leasing a smaller electric car, the difference gets smaller and smaller in costs for driving electric vs petrol. I don't mind, we can both charge the car at work, my wife works at the office when I work from home. 90% of the kms driven are to and from work.
Edit: my habits only changed in how I drive, not how much as I don't have a option to do so.
Countries need to do it like Norway, they developed the expertise from tbe ground up and now reap the benefits. 50 years ago they were a poor, but self-sufficient country (potatoes and fish are easy!), now they are so rich they don’t know what to do with all the state money. (Not talking about NL, you have the expertise with oil for decades, Royal Dutch Shell etc).Oil we don't have, refineries a lot as we have the best accessible port of Europe. That fuel is so expensive is next to the "high" crude oil price (which isn't that high, has been higher but fuel at that moment wasn't more expensive ?) is it is so heavily taxed that at a "normal" fuel price of 1.50 a liter still 1 euro is tax.
If were talking the energy crisis in general: we live on one of the biggest reserves of natural gas in the world, but still think it's nessecary to import gas and export our own. It's cheaper to export your own gas and stack taxes than to give your own gas to your own population. People living in that area where the gas is pumped up are complaining about their houses having cracks in it because of earthquakes the drilling cause and they righteously do so. But politics says "no, we're not going to compensate you, we just stop the drilling" instead of saying "here is a 7 or 8 figure number in a fund to compensate the damage and we drill the 15 figure (yes, fiveteen) number that's still in the ground up".
Luckily I have the funds to not be dependant of gas for heating my home and I have solar panels, but I feel sorry for people that have to pay 800 euros a month just to have electricity and gas.