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Firewood, Heating and Wood Burning Equipment
A topic beat into the ground
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<blockquote data-quote="Whitespider" data-source="post: 3387063" data-attributes="member: 57106"><p>60-percent of our propane comes from separating it from natural gas as is it is extracted from the ground, 40-percent comes from the refining of crude oil. Wherever natural gas/crude oil is being extracted from the ground there is also propane being separated from it at the time of extraction… including east coast oil fields, such as those in Pennsylvania. Although more propane does come from Canada, that just doesn’t seem to be enough of an explanation for the huge price difference. Also, Nebraska does not have a pipeline running through it, but still typically has the lowest LPG prices of any state. There just has to be more to it than logistics in mind…</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Whitespider, post: 3387063, member: 57106"] 60-percent of our propane comes from separating it from natural gas as is it is extracted from the ground, 40-percent comes from the refining of crude oil. Wherever natural gas/crude oil is being extracted from the ground there is also propane being separated from it at the time of extraction… including east coast oil fields, such as those in Pennsylvania. Although more propane does come from Canada, that just doesn’t seem to be enough of an explanation for the huge price difference. Also, Nebraska does not have a pipeline running through it, but still typically has the lowest LPG prices of any state. There just has to be more to it than logistics in mind… [/QUOTE]
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