Surge Days

Surge days are days that we have set aside where nationwide gasoline and diesel sales are already slated to be below the average demand values. For instance, Americans use about 400 million gallons of gas per day. This is a Department of Energy figure that equates to about 16.7 million gallons per hour, or 278,000 gallons per minute.

Now that you have the figures, here is how our "Surge Days" work. On days that national fuel consumption is already slated to be lowest, we have set aside a NO BUY policy for everyone on our list of Clubsters (petitioners). What happens is as our Clubsters list grows we have more and more people making a point of NOT buying fuel of any kind on these Surge Days, to force reserves up higher than they already climb on low consumption days. We have published a list of these days below for you to plan your driving and purchases accordingly.

This may sound like a long shot to some, but power comes in numbers, and we believe that we can accomplish our goals rather quickly. Reserves are near capacity, and a newly released Oil Reserves Planned expansion report stated that new storage facilities will not completed until 2018.

Even if only 1% of the fuel consuming U.S. population adheres to Surge Days, the results are remarkable! In theory we could max out U.S. storage facilities in literally 15 Surge Days. The numbers exponentiate for every percentage point that is added to this figure, and in before we know it fuel prices will be forced so low that it will even have a trickle UP effect on the price that we on foreign oil, which will have a secondary trickle down effect back at the pump. It is a win win situation, and we believe that we can drive prices so low that $2.00 per gallon becomes our national average once again.

SURGE DAYS (write this in your schedule)

07/05/2011
09/06/2011
11/24/2011
12/25/2011