msconduct: (Default)
[personal profile] msconduct
 I've read a lot of complaints from people in the US recently about the price of gas, which seems to be about $3/gallon. I've always been vague about the conversion to litres, not just from gallons but from AMERICAN gallons, which I have no clue about at all. But I just looked it up and did the conversion. A US gallon of gas at $3.60 is around 95 cents a litre.

I'm crying. Gas, or petrol as we call it in New Zealand, is around $3 a litre, or more than three times the cost in the US. Other than a very brief dip in 2016, petrol hasn't been under $1/litre since 2000.

Date: 2024-05-15 01:46 pm (UTC)
echomyst: (neechee shy)
From: [personal profile] echomyst
I'm always annoyed when other Americans complain about their gas prices lol

Ours always hover around $6 per gallon. California always has some of the highest gas prices in the country and MY town always has the highest in the SF North Bay area thanks to monopoly of gas stations (almost all owned by a single family!).

$6 a gallon is still less than $3 per litre. But! The US is incredibly car dependent :( It's hard getting anywhere without a vehicle unless you live in a big city. My kids and I walk a lot, but even then it's just not feasible to walk/bike/bus everywhere, especially if we need to get out of our suburb.

Date: 2024-05-15 01:55 pm (UTC)
echomyst: (neechee shy)
From: [personal profile] echomyst
Same deal with electricity, natural gas, water, housing... Anytime someone in another part of the U.S. complain about how expensive it is, I just laugh.

It's amazing what a dramatic difference in costs of living it can be across this country. My friends in Texas have been snapping up fixer uppers at <$90k to rebuild and rent out. Here, there is absolutely nothing to be had for that price, not even a shed never mind mobile home or whatever. Fixer uppers here *might* start at $600k...

Date: 2024-05-15 01:59 pm (UTC)
echomyst: (Default)
From: [personal profile] echomyst
I am curious though: how walkable/bikable/public transit-able is New Zealand?

Is there solid public transit across the country?

Date: 2024-05-15 03:11 pm (UTC)
kaishin108: Flower tulip lavender (Default)
From: [personal profile] kaishin108
Oh dear, your petrol is so high. That is what I have heard about the EU also. I don't dare complain.
Since 2000 you say, yikes!

Date: 2024-05-15 03:19 pm (UTC)
spiffikins: (Default)
From: [personal profile] spiffikins
I would love to be at $3.60 a gallon, LOL :)

I was THRILLED to find $4.99/gallon last week - every gas station in town other than Costco, is $5.45 or more!

But yeah - Canada, New Zealand, the UK - anywhere that uses litres, have been >$1/litre for ages and ages, and just pat Americans on the head when we whine :)

Date: 2024-05-15 08:11 pm (UTC)
kevin_standlee: (Not Sensible)
From: [personal profile] kevin_standlee
I think that it's a matter of faith to a significant number of 'Murikens that gasoline should cost about 5 cents/gallon, or be free, or maybe that they should pay us to take it away. Parking should similarly always be free and unlimited. And of course "freeways" are free, and cost nothing to build, and the guv'mint never does enough to keep them maintained, but they never should do any maintenance when it's personally inconvenient. Also, there shouldn't be taxes, because Freedom! And so forth.

Having said that, I note that gas prices here in Fernley where I live are significantly less expensive than they are in Reno, 50 km west of here. I always tell people driving from California into Nevada who are planning to keep going east (say to go to Salt Lake City, where this year's Westercon is) to never refuel in Reno. Wait until Fernley and save 50 cents/gallon.

Date: 2024-05-15 10:32 pm (UTC)
kaishin108: Flower tulip lavender (Default)
From: [personal profile] kaishin108
Do many people invest in electric cars there? It doesn't seem feasible here in Idaho with our lonely mountains roads. I would like a car that does both, but we don't have a charging station in our garage. I can only imagine the price.

Date: 2024-05-16 02:16 pm (UTC)
spiffikins: (Default)
From: [personal profile] spiffikins
Yeah, taxes and environmental thingies - hence why blue states have higher ones, since red states seem to think climate change isn't a Real Thing. sigh.


In the winter they change the "mix" and the prices go down a TINY bit, and in the summer they change again, and the prices go up (more than they went down, tbh)

The difference involves the fuel’s Reid Vapor Pressure (RVP), which is a measure of how easily the fuel evaporates at a given temperature. Winter-blend gas has a higher RVP because the fuel must be able to evaporate at low temperatures for the engine to operate properly. Summer-blend gas has a lower RVP to prevent excessive evaporation when outside temperatures rise.

Date: 2024-05-16 08:17 pm (UTC)
echomyst: (Default)
From: [personal profile] echomyst
That's in my town -- suburbia where it's supposed to be more affordable? :/ I'd love to move back to the GTA (greater Toronto area) but the prices are like yours. We're completely priced out unless we move in with my parents.

Date: 2024-05-16 08:24 pm (UTC)
echomyst: (Default)
From: [personal profile] echomyst
Is this the "ugly" part of NZ? Everything else seems to be wonderful!!! It is disappointing that NZ is also so car dependent since it's not a huge country. What about elevated monorail for hilly regions? Vancouver has their SkyTrain and it was great when we tried it years ago!

Oh yeah re: friction between cyclists and drivers -- it's the same here. Granted, some cyclists don't follow right of way and it annoys me too as a fellow cyclist. I'm wary of biking with my kids here because the bike lanes aren't protected from traffic.

Date: 2024-05-17 05:41 pm (UTC)
echomyst: (Default)
From: [personal profile] echomyst
Guess no country is perfect, eh?

Consumer goods are loads more expensive in Canada too compared to the U.S., but I'll take highly subsidized healthcare any day over this insane American healthcare system that can actually bankrupt you.

Sweden seems like an idyllic country with a strong social safety net, so I was surprised when my Swedish friend said she prefers raising her family in the U.S. -- "there's more diversity here and everyone has to be the same in Sweden"... so, wonderful if you fit in to the mold, but not if you don't? I would not have fared well under their covid response, for example.
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