Why do I give a rat's ass about the investors in any particular oil company, or what assumptions they may or may not have made?  Maybe they made bad a choice.  Whoever said returns were guaranteed?  Should Enron have been allowed to continue breaking the law just because a lot of people were going to lose their investments?  What if I bought a gas guzzler because I believed gas prices would not go up - why is the risk of the man who buys stock more protected than the risk of the man who buys a car?  

For that matter, what about the man who invests in GM stock - we allow Exxon to run up prices and profits on a captive market, and drive GM stock into the toilet.  I guess it's GM's fault for failing to get a bunch of auto industry whores into the Whitehouse.  Free market my ass.

Enron broke the law. How are the oil companies breaking the law? I welcome higher prices. Will it be painful? You are darned right it will! And pain and high price are still the best levers to exert change on people in this country.

What do you want? A return to 18 cent a gallon oil while it's running out? This is exactly what peak oil predicted - rising prices, volatility in markets, all of which give openings to alternative energy sources. The key is less about what big oil will do but what will people do to get out from under big oil?

And given that so many people still drive gas guzzler SUVs and commute 50 miles to work, I don't feel particularly sorry for them yet. Those are choices that they can change very quickly if they choose to do so. If everyone was driving fuel efficient hybrids, living close to where they work, and we moved far more goods by rail than truck, maybe I'd feel differently but I don't think so.

High prices are part of the cure. Consider this as chemotherapy to get rid of the oil cancer. It will hurt like hell but the alternative is worse.

I have wanted higher fuel prices for decades, with the revenue funneled into non fossil fuel R&D and infrastructure.  If we had done this years ago we would not be in such a pickle now.  The oil companies would have fought this tooth and nail as bad for profits.  Now suddenly higher fuel prices are great, as long as they get to keep the money.  Oil is an industry that is supported and protected by my tax dollars, so no they don't have a right to rip me off with the product they supply.  It is not functioning as a free market, and they are not entitled to unlimited profit from a captive customer base.
slightly off topic but just saw this on the front page of our business paper in the uk.

http://www.thebusinessonline.com/Stories.aspx?General%20Motors%20in%20crisis%20as%20its%20car%20sale s%20plummet&StoryID=348B4CED-FEFC-49EA-8686-AB110C1F75F2&SectionID=F3B76EF0-7991-4389-B72E-D 07EB5AA1CEE

GENERAL Motors will this week reveal that sales collapsed in October, taking its US market share to a 25-year low and fuelling fresh fears that the world's largest carmaker is heading towards bankruptcy. Its US sales dropped 26% compared with the same month last year, according to early estimates, putting its monthly US market share at 20.5% - the lowest since at least 1980.

On a totally seperate note, I have been regularly typing in "peak oil" into google, when I started 3 months ago it was 1.7 million hits,it slowly whent up to 2.1million by last week. today its gone down to 1.7million is it a sunday thing? or something more sinister?

* On Saturday, GM signed a memorandum of understanding with Chinese carmaker SAIC to explore opportunities for energy efficient and environmentally friendly hybrid cars in China.