Fuel shortages around the world.

In my little corner of Quebec (Canada), the price of regular gasoline this week averaged around $1.80 per liter. This is quite absurd considering that our gasoline comes from Western Canada (Alberta) in a proportion of 50 to 70%, and from the United States at around 20 to 40%. Unfortunately, we are under the influence of the global market.

On my side as well, we have made fuel reserves, and we are very happy that since last summer, my partner has retired, which came at just the right time, since he used to drive nearly 3,000 km per month to go to work.

For the past five years, we have been preparing for what we are experiencing now with the conflict in Iran, by installing a wood stove to heat the house as well as a wood cookstove to allow us to prepare our meals. Within a month, we will finish installing our solar panels to help us reduce electricity costs. Having a very large multi-generational house (we live with our son who has his apartment attached to the house), our electricity costs are close to $6,000 per year. Our provider is Hydro-Québec, which generates hydroelectric power using dams.

We also store a lot of food, and for the past five years I have been growing a large garden to become as self-sufficient as possible in vegetables. I do not raise animals, not having enough time to manage it, but living in the countryside we have access to several small farmers who sell good meat and organic eggs.

Of course, I tell myself that nothing is certain for the future and that we could lose everything, but I do not want to let these thoughts overwhelm me. I always tell myself “one day at a time,” and that we do the best we can and will adapt if needed. However, I am very saddened by what people are going through under the bombs, whose lives are hanging by a thread and who do not have access to the security and abundance we have. But what can I do, other than observe, analyze, and try to understand the lessons. And I also do not want to fall into the mindset of comparing myself—whether I am worse or better off than others, or that I do not deserve the chance to live in a peaceful country. I try to maintain a neutral attitude and tell myself that what I am experiencing and where I live is part of the choices my soul likely made before incarnating. And that there are lessons or experiences I came here to learn, not related to “having,” but rather to my “being,” in how I must act in my relationships with others and develop my self-work and inner growth. As described by @iamthatis.
There is nowhere that one can move to that is 100% safe. We can, however, make our lives as safe as can be with increased knowledge, awareness, and preparedness in case of disruption. Psychological and spiritual preparations are probably more important than anything else. That means doing the Work - learning to control one's thoughts and emotions.
 
Fuel prices haven't moved a whole lot in the UK yet, and there is an environment of great complacency. Maybe the "special relationship" with USA will save it for now, but I wouldn't bet on it.
If it helps anyone in the UK, there is a website fuelmap.co.uk where you can check the prices of fuel in your area. Looks like the average atm is:
Unleaded150.5p▲ +1.0p
Diesel178.8p▲ +1.7p

The +1.0p is the change over the last 24hrs. The map is colour coded (green, amber, red) so you can see how good a deal you are getting compared to the national average.

You can usually find second hand 20L jerry cans for about £20 on gumtree or facebook marketplace if you haven't already got some.
 
To my fellow Aussies on this thread, sorry to hear about your misfortunes but Australia has been asking for this. We are a woefully stupid, wasteful, childish and selfish people and we need pain to wake us up. I have done some preparation for what's happening, not hard prepping but it has helped immensely. Staying single helps, a lot of Aussie sheilas aren't the sharpest tools in the shed and their programs are legion and intensifying as the time approaches. I do get some romantic interest shown but I steer clear, too much of a liability, one call to the cops, an unfounded allegation with zero evidence and you're done. Happening on a regular basis in my area, 2 of my son's school friends got absolutely raped by the system because they dumped cupcake for cheating. I recently lost a regular gig because the owner employed a mentally and emotionally unstable woman with a drug problem who I've known for years and warned against. This train wreck told him that her teenaged daughter felt threatened by my brief visits to check the sheep and chickens so I was let go, his loss, he'll be getting financially butt raped in the near future. She's done it before to 2 people I know already.
Then there's my handyman customers, some are aware that something extremely amiss occurred 6 years ago and have been making plans, stupid ones. They move into the area and buy the biggest and most impractical house they can afford, worse still, they destroy or gut a perfectly good small house to cupcake's satisfaction. I often find myself involved at some stage of the farce, occasionally I'm there as a medic because some middle aged bloke has wrecked himself while working on one of cupcake's pointless vanity projects. I often get asked for advice by customers who then completely ignore it and follow the advice of dodgy tradesmen, chaos ensues. Hugely expensive.
I maintain BNBs in the area. The level of waste is catastrophic, quality food is dumped every Sunday, I salvage what I can for the animals and the chickens eat well. Some guests buy towels and bedding for the weekend, then dump it on Sunday, still has its factory smell and wrapping, I wash them and give it to charity.
Builders, I occasionally work for builders, waste is horrific. A tree is felled and milled in the tropics, shipped to Australia and useful lengths are then dumped in a skip; along with drywall, insulation, nails, glue, paint, screws etc. Good for me, means I don't have to buy the stuff and much of my house has been renovated with salvage but where will it end?
Traffic control. Picture this, I'm there in Hi-Vis by a big red, shiny fire truck with it's lights flashing. I've deployed signs, traffic cones and barrier tape and my hand is in the universally accepted sign for STOP. Emergency/utility vehicles are everywhere, its obvious something has a occurred that needs attention. A car draws near, slows, we make eye contact then he or she drives on through, straight into oncoming traffic/downed powerlines/utility workers/medics or colleagues clearing up the mess. I count the number of cars that do this, it's 25%, that's critical mass levels of stupid. They're generally white, worldly, educated, successful but selfish and stupid. Pedestrians are much the same, they'll bypass 4 levels of warnings, cones, signs, tape and I; then walk straight into an area energized by fallen powerlines.
Well, that's my rant for now, sorry my fellow Aussies, things are looking pretty grim. The programming is definitely complete downunder!
 

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