Gasoline prices heat up amid refinery, pipeline problems, rising oil costs
NEW YORK - A surge in gasoline prices is taking some of the fun out of summer.
The national average for a gallon of gasoline at the pump has climbed to $3.67, up 34 cents since July 1. An increase in crude oil prices and problems with refineries and pipelines on the West Coast and in the Midwest are blamed.
Gasoline prices are not expected to get as high as they did in April, however, when 10 states topped $4 a gallon and the U.S. average topped out at $3.94.
In Nevada, the statewide average last week was $3.55, a more modest 1.3-cent rise but still unwelcome news in this sluggish economy.
Prices for crude oil and wholesale gasoline are set on financial exchanges around the world based on supply and demand and expectations about how those factors may change.
The price at the pump in the U.S. fell more than 60 cents per gallon during the spring as the global economy slowed and turmoil in the Middle East seemed to subside.
But crude oil prices are climbing again, rising to $94 a barrel from a low of $78 in late June. Production outages in South Sudan and the North Sea, Western sanctions that have cut the flow of Iranian oil, Iran's threat to block tankers passing through the Strait of Hormuz, and fears that the violence in Syria could escalate into a regional conflict have driven up oil prices.
Seasonal factors are also sending pump prices higher. Gasoline usually costs more in the late spring and summer because refiners must make more expensive gasoline blends to meet clean air rules and because the summer driving boosts demand.
In the past few weeks, pipelines serving Wisconsin and Illinois ruptured, refineries were shut down unexpectedly because of equipment problems in Illinois and Indiana, and a blaze broke out at a refinery in Richmond, Calif.
Gasoline prices shot up more than 50 cents in a month in Indiana, Vermont, Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky, Michigan and Wisconsin. And California drivers have seen gasoline climb 13 cents since Monday's fire. Motorists in many cities there are paying well over $4.
Drivers in 20 states, including the possible White House battleground states of Colorado, Iowa, Nevada, Ohio and Wisconsin, are paying more for gasoline this year than they did last year. The list will probably soon include Virginia and North Carolina, said Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Information Service. The national average a year ago was $3.64.
"If you are paying more than in the past, it does have the potential to hurt the president," Kloza said.
Economists said the price bump probably won't have much of an effect on economic growth, at least not yet. The extra 34 cents a gallon translates to $33 per month for a typical household.
Prices could go higher if Middle East tensions rise, more refinery problems emerge or hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico force oil drillers or refiners to shut down. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration this week said this could be a more active hurricane season than previously thought.
But analysts say that without those disruptions, gasoline will probably begin dropping after Labor Day as refiners switch to cheaper blends and drivers hit the road less often.





