carolfoy said:
Yes Clare I had that email too, about boycotting bp and esso the two largest petrol stations and that would force their prices down thereby forcing jet tesco etc to reduce theirs too!
Oil companies can manipulate their prices somewhat by controlling how much fuel they produce and where they sell it, but they can't alter the basics of supply and demand: prices go down when people buy less of an item, prices go up when people buy more of an item, and thus prices go way up when demand outstrips available supply.
The "gas out" schemes that propose to alter the demand side of the equation by shunning one or two specific brands of fuel for a while won't work. Because they're based on the misconception that an oil company's only outlet for fuel is its own branded service stations. That isn't the case: fuel is a fungible commodity, so if one oil company's product isn't being bought up in one particular market or outlet, it will simply sell its output to (or through) other outlets.
A boycott of a couple of brands of petrol won't result in lower overall prices. Prices at all the non-boycotted outlets would rise due to the temporarily limited supply and increased demand, making the original prices look cheap by comparison. The shunned outlets could then make a killing by offering fuel at its "normal" (i.e., pre-boycott) price or by selling off their output to the non-boycotted companies, who will need the extra supply to meet demand. The only person who really gets hurt in this proposed scheme is the service station operator, who has almost no control over the price of petrol.
The only practical way of reducing fuel prices is through the straightforward means of buying less petrol, not through a simple and painless scheme of just shifting where we buy it. The inconvenience of driving less is a hardship too many people apparently aren't willing to endure.
anyhow ....... so its been warm of late ......