Is this Argentina’s oil?
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Do you mean Venezuela’s oil?
There was a filling station in my town which was also significantly cheaper. About 40-50 cents less than nearby stations. I used it for years but also wondered how it was so cheap. Then one day, I went there and the price had gone up from the bargain of a decade to merely reasonable. I was wondering why but then I noticed that someone had put a sticker next to the dispenser keypad that wasn't there before: a fuel tax sticker. It's required by law on all fuel pumps here but I guess I just never noticed that they just never had one there previously.
No points for guessing what happened lol
I look forward to some renegade renaming efforts changing it to the Socialist Fuel Network.
Is it possible that the wholesale cost of fuel is below 3.47 and the others just have higher profit margins?
Edit: Once taxes and fees are incorporated you end up at approximately $3.6-3.7 for Pennsylvania and New Jersey. The small difference is probably made up for with advertising, other purchases or funding for PR campaign. It's about $2.40 per car tank
3.47 was profitable just a week or two ago when wholesale prices were 2.59
I want the price of oil to be $2028 dollars per barrel
Didn't they recently start allowing for 85 octane fuel? Just a thought
It wasn't 85 octane, it was ethanol content- raising it from e10 to e15. Same octane but lower energy density by a percent or two, and can be damaging to older vehicles that may not have ethanol safe gaskets in the fuel system. And also is a huge bailout for industrial corn farmers in red states.
85 is only allowed in a few select high mountain states like Colorado, where the extremely thin air means lower octane fuels have a lower chance of detonating/pinging and causing engine damage.
I really hope it ruins lots of engines.