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Annual pump price rise is fast, furious this year

Refinery outages, slack imports boost average price near $3 a gallon

MSNBC video
Drivers could see $4 gas prices soon
April 30: Energy market analyst Phil Flynn tells MSNBC-TV's Alex Witt that gas prices could skyrocket due to refinery disruption.

MSNBC

Analysis
By John W. Schoen
Senior Producer
MSNBC
updated 8:14 a.m. ET May 1, 2007

John W. Schoen
Senior Producer

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As reliably as the rise of temperatures and the hopes of baseball fans, the  price of gasoline is on a steady march to an average $3 a gallon. Thanks to strong demand and a series of refinery outages and breakdowns, the predictable spring surge in gasoline prices is coming sooner than usual.

The national average price for a gallon of regular, unleaded gasoline rose 10 cents last week to $2.97, or 5.2 cents higher than a year ago, according to a weekly Energy Department survey released Monday.

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With prices in many parts of the country, especially on the West Coast, already well above $3 a gallon, some of the most pessimistic forecasts calling for peaks above $4 a gallon in some locations.

“I think it’s probably one of the worst-looking years we’ve seen," said Antoine Halff, head of energy research at futures broker Fimat. "And that's probably why you’re seeing more apocalyptic forecasts than is typically the case.”

Pump prices typically rise in the spring as refiners shut down for maintenance and a switch to summer fuels while demand picks up as the weather improves. On average, summer pump prices peak at nearly 60 percent higher than winter lows, according to Tom Kloza of Oil Price Information Service, which tracks prices daily at 120,000 service stations.

This year, prices are already up about 80 percent from their January lows. But Kloza said that although the run-up has come fast and furious this year, it may not have much further to go.

“You can find $5 — just return that rental car without the full tank,” said Kloza. “But with the exception of California and the West Coast, we should be getting very close to the top here in the next 10 days or so.”

West Coast drivers already are paying an average $3.28 a gallon for regular, according to the Energy Department. Among major cities, San Francisco had the highest gasoline costs at $3.46 a gallon for regular, up 6.6 cents.

Meanwhile the nation's best deals on gasoline can be found on the Gulf Coast — home to about half of the country's refining capacity — where prices were up 10 cents last week to an average $2.85. Houston had the lowest city pump price at $2.82 a gallon, up 7.5 cents.

Diesel fuel prices fell 4 cents to $2.81 a gallon — the second straight decline and 8.5 cents lower than a year ago.

On top of the usual maintenance, refiners have been hit with a series of unplanned outages —everything from power failures to fires — that have cut production by 2.6 percent in the past two weeks. That’s left gasoline producers relying more heavily on inventories, which have dropped for 11 straight weeks. Inventories now stand at 15 percent below February levels and are well below their five-year average for this time of year. Gasoline stocks are at their lowest levels since October 2005.

Imported gasoline, which has taken up some of the slack in the past, is also in short supply. European refiners have shifted more production to diesel fuel as European motorists gravitate toward the higher fuel efficiency that diesel vehicles provide. Imports are running about 12 percent below year-ago levels.

"It is going to come down to refinery runs and imports," said Mike Wittner, head of energy research at the investment bank Calyon. "Gasoline prices will be on the high side, but there won't be any supply shortages."

One bright spot this year will come from ethanol prices, which have come down from last year as government subsidies help promote more production. Last year, tight supplies of the corn-based fuel, used as an additive in many parts of the country, sent ethanol prices surging. That added roughly 25 cents to the retail price of a gallon of gasoline, said Kloza. This year, expanded production has helped moderate ethanol prices.


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