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Canada gasoline exports

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    Canada gasoline exports

    http://www.indexmundi.com/commodities/?commodity=gasoline&currency=cad

    http://www.indexmundi.com/energy.aspx?country=ca&product=gasoline&graph=expo rts

    IDK if the export price includes tax paid to Canada but if the measure is Amercian gallon at 3.78 l per gallon, the export price is Cdn$.64 per litre.

    #2
    Yup.

    Potash is cheaper in India and China than it is 90 miles from belle plaine.

    Nitrogen the same way.

    It's not going to change.

    Comment


      #3
      yea , why shouldn't we have to pay more for our own resources than other countries . what a joke

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        #4
        It's in the $ and the bases. We pay the same. I just don't know how.

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          #5
          thanks for having our back federated

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            #6
            Pretty sure that would just be the "base price", so add federal excise tax of $0.10/L, sask provincial fuel tax of $0.15/L, $0.03/L pump markup, and 5% gst you end up with $0.966 at the refinery, transportation by tanker to destination extra. If that $0.64 price is over an entire year, i would say its not terribly far out.

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              #7
              who gives a shit anymore anyway. we are going to pay for fuel whatever the companies tell us we are going to pay, forever and that's the way it is going to be. just like in the post above about new combine prices, a friend of mine that sells john deere told me 5 years ago that million dollar new combines were right around the corner. But wait lets complain about the price of farm land somemore. Its the only asset that farmers have that should be going up in value, but farmers want to give some neighbor kid a break, lets sell for 60,000 a quarter because its the right thing to do.

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                #8
                Right on sk!

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                  #9
                  Right on sk!

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                    #10
                    That shitty investment in iron wkll be depreciated and worn out and your dirt will still be there. Never bought a brand new combine but some pretty low hour ones. Different story for some other pieces. But I always liked buying land. Good solid asset that will hopefully make you a living and appreciate at the same time. Iron on the other hand.....

                    As far as domestic prices....what ever the market will bear and consumer tolerate. Against his will of course.

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                      #11
                      Can I buy a tanker of US gasoline and bring to Canada?

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                        #12
                        They used to have anti-dumping laws that forbid trading commodities into foreign markets at lower prices than you sold for in your own market.
                        In place to protect local producers from oversupply somewhere else getting dumped below the cost of production and destroying local economy's for short term relief but long term pain.
                        I can't say if they still exist with all the free trade promoted today.
                        Probably about as effective as anti-collusion laws.

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