What they're not telling you: # The Complicated Reality Behind High Gas Prices Average gas prices in the United States have surged nearly 40 percent since March 1, yet the mainstream narrative blaming a single geopolitical event obscures a far more complex economic reality that reveals why Americans remain vulnerable to price shocks despite the country's status as a net petroleum exporter. The surface explanation appears straightforward: Iran's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz in response to U.S. military operations has trapped hundreds of tankers and deprived the world of 7 to 10 percent of global oil supply.
What the Documents Show
This disruption has triggered severe shortages in Europe and Asia, driving prices upward across the board. Yet here lies the first crucial detail the mainstream press downplays—the United States gets almost no oil through the Strait of Hormuz. By conventional logic, American consumers should be insulated from this crisis. The country produces enough petroleum to export rather than import. But this is where the official "energy independence" narrative collapses against economic reality.
Follow the Money
The reason for America's vulnerability is deceptively simple: oil is a fungible commodity traded on global markets. As Patrick De Haan, petroleum analyst with GasBuddy, explained to The Epoch Times, "everyone is impacted by the events" because crude can be shipped anywhere. Countries facing acute shortages—particularly in Europe and Asia—are willing to pay premium prices for available supply. According to Paul Sankey, president of Sankey Research, the result is "huge demand to export the product," which creates upward pressure on domestic American prices regardless of domestic supply levels. This exposes a critical flaw in how policymakers and media frame energy policy. Some might assume the government could simply prohibit oil exports to keep prices down domestically.
What Else We Know
However, experts consulted by The Epoch Times indicate this would likely cause more problems than it solves, a counterintuitive reality that rarely appears in mainstream coverage. The constraint lies not in political will but in refinement capacity and crude specifications. American oil, produced primarily through fracking, is classified as "light sweet"—easy to refine with minimal impurities. refineries are actually engineered to process heavier crude. Much of Middle Eastern oil qualifies as "medium" grade, while Canadian production is "heavy sour," and Venezuelan reserves are extremely heavy and sulphurous. This technical mismatch means simply restricting exports would leave American refineries undersupplied with the specific grades they're designed to handle, while creating global shortages that would ultimately drive prices higher everywhere.
Primary Sources
- Source: ZeroHedge
- Category: Government Secrets
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