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Drivers Paying Record Gas Prices

By ADAM SCHRECK,
AP
Posted: 2008-06-25 13:33:37
Filed Under: Crude Oil Prices
NEW YORK (April 21) - Rising gasoline prices tightened the squeeze on drivers Monday, jumping to an average $3.50 a gallon at filling stations across the country.


Crude oil, meanwhile, set a new record of its own, spiking after an attack on a Japanese oil tanker in the Middle East to close above $117 a barrel for the first time.

"It's killing us," said Jean Beuns, a cab driver in New York who estimated he is making $125 to $150 a month less than in the fall because of costlier fuel. "And it was so quick. Every day you see the price go up 5, 6, 10 cents more."

Diesel prices at the pump also struck a record high, of $4.20 a gallon, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service, putting pressure on truckers and other shippers who rely on the fuel to transport goods to market.

Prices are expected to keep climbing as they trace the path of crude, which has surged to new records for six trading sessions in a row. Oil prices are rising along with a host of commodities, from corn and wheat to gold and platinum, that are enticing speculators seeking hedges against a weakening dollar.

Light, sweet crude for May delivery rose to a record $117.76 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange before settling at $117.48, up 79 cents from Friday's close.

Nationally, retail gas prices jumped more than a nickel over the weekend, and are up 23 percent from a year earlier. Drivers are paying the lowest prices in New Jersey and the most in California, where a gallon of regular is now averaging $3.86 for a gallon.

For motorists, the worst may be still to come. That is because the summer driving season, when demand is at its greatest, has yet to begin.

"People want to drive, they need to drive, they have to go to their job," said Samer Katib, manager of a Marathon station on Chicago's South Side. "But people who would drive around or go places for fun, they're not doing that any more. It's just go to your work and go home."

The Energy Department predicted earlier this month that monthly average gasoline price will peak at over $3.60 per gallon in June and could possibly reach the $4 threshold.

"It's uncharted territory," said Tom Kloza of the Oil Price Information Service, Wall, N.J. "I don't think we're done, but I have to believe we're in the eighth or ninth inning" of price increases.

The higher prices are already prompting some drivers to cut back.

In New York, Elvis Ragbir and Anthony Winckler said they are driving less and taking the subway more.

"I'm spending all my gas money on MetroCards," Winckler said in the waiting room of a vehicle inspection station in Manhattan. Ragbir, a delivery truck driver, said he is looking to trade in his Lexus LS 400 for a smaller car.

In downtown Chicago, Sharon Cooper spent $52 to fill up three-quarters of the tank in her Toyota Highlander SUV. She said she tries not to let the prices get to her, although she also is changing her habits: "I am buying a bike to commute to work this summer," she said.

Energy Department data show gasoline consumption fell more than 1 percent during the four weeks ended April 11, compared with the same period a year ago.

That change in consumption patterns, while not drastic, is significant, said Mariano Gurfinkel, project manager at the Center for Energy Economics at the University of Texas at Austin, who expects per-capita demand to drop further this summer if gas prices rise or even remain at the current levels.

Americans will continue to drive, but some may change a summer vacation destination as gasoline costs continue to make a bigger dent in their pocketbooks, Gurfinkel said.

Crude prices came under increased pressure Monday after the 150,000-ton tanker Takayama was struck off the coast of Yemen as it headed for Saudi Arabia, its Japanese operator, Nippon Yusen K.K., said in a statement posted on its Web site. None of the ship's 23 crew members was injured, but several hundreds of gallons of fuel leaked before a 1-inch hole in the tanker's stern was repaired, the company said.

Kyodo News agency reported that the Japanese tanker was fired on by a rocket launcher from a small boat.

"There's clearly some geopolitical tension in the market," said Mark Pervan, senior commodity strategist at the ANZ Bank in Melbourne, Australia. "This will die down, but the market is pretty jittery at the moment."

Adding to the worries were claims Monday from the main militant group in Nigeria's restive south that it had launched two more attacks on oil pipelines in the region. Attacks since early 2006 on Nigerian oil infrastructure by the militant group have cut nearly one-quarter of the country's normal petroleum output, boosting oil prices. Nigeria is a major supplier to the U.S.

Comments over the weekend by an OPEC official that the group was not likely to increase production also supported prices Monday. Abdalla Salem el-Badri, secretary-general of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, said Sunday that oil prices would likely go higher and that the group was ready to raise production if the price pressure was due to a shortage of supply - something he doubted.

"Oil prices, there is a common understanding that has nothing to do with supply and demand," el-Badri said on the sidelines of an energy conference in Rome.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures rose 1.9 cents to settle at $3.3114 a gallon while gasoline futures fell about a penny to settle at $2.9791 a gallon. Natural gas futures jumped 14.6 cents to settle at $10.733 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Associated Press Writers Dave Carpenter in Chicago, Dan Caterinicchia in Washington, Pablo Gorondi in Budapest and Thomas Hogue in Bangkok, Thailand, contributed to this report.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2008-04-20 20:09:13
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Recent Comments

1 - 10 of 892
892 comments

CLThiel 03:37:00 PM Apr 30 2008

What out for SHELL Gas Stations!!!! They are only advertising REGULAR and the MID-GRADE is anywhere from $.12 to $.20 higher. The Attorney General's office is on it for Deceptive Advertising and "Bait and Switch".

Tghtblkrebl80 10:37:34 PM Apr 25 2008

Oil companies are and will always be profitable as long as the American public and oil/automobile lobbyist financed politicians don't invest in public transportation! The failure to invest in mass transit (highspeed trains, subways,light rail) outside of major metro areas will continue the disparity of the haves and have-nots.

JMA1155 09:23:45 PM Apr 24 2008

Anyone...and everyone of you out here who blames George Bush, the administration, the US government.... or policies of the US, have no clue... at all ....as to the reality of these energy sources. Energy is soley based upon supply and demand. So keep driving these behemouth SUV's, with 500 hp, carrying just one person...on the interstates, every day.... light your houses like daylight... use the resources as if they have no end. Bush didn't buy your SUV, or tell you to stay away from mass-transit.... Collectively, we have all created this monster with our thirst for consumptions. Now we are paying the price.

TFCrow 05:17:37 PM Apr 24 2008

****** and limp dick Cheney have been smiling lately.

jackiesmith1968 11:14:28 AM Apr 22 2008

Even in my small town we're getting hit very hard. I paid $3.60 today, cost me $65 to fill my midsize car. I started doing the online survey stuff to help out, and it really has made a difference. http://moneymakingsurveysites.blogspot.com/ is the place to start if you're interested in it.

BV31640 10:47:45 PM Apr 21 2008

SOMEONE CORRECT ME IF I AM WRONG.
ISN'T THIS THE SECOND STIMULUS CHECK WE ARE GETTING UNDER GEORGE
BUSH. THE FIRST ONE THE SAME THING HAPPENED OIL AND NATURAL GAS
PRICES ROSE. THIS IS A CLASSIC EXAMPLE OF GIVING WITH ONE HAND AND
TAKING FROM OTHER. THE ONLY DIFFERENCE IS OUR CHILDREN AND THEIR
CHILDREN WILL BE PAYING FOR BUSH'S FOLLY. I CAN HONESTLY SAY THAT
IF I MET THAT SOB IN A ALLEY IT WOULD BE ME OR HIM. SIMPLE AND TO THE
POINT. THE MAN IS A LIAR, ELITIST BASTARD THAT COULD CARELESS FOR
THE AVERAGE AMERICAN. HE HAS SOLD EVERY AMERICAN OUT.

GEONTIME 06:41:15 PM Apr 21 2008

What about the price of diesel fuel that runs the transportation of America. Diesel is known to be the cheapest fuel processed and yet it is over $4.40 in San Diego, Ca., and rising by the day. Three quarters of America's cost line is off drilling by the government and the only commodity product controlled by the feds for the last 100 years? We have not built as refinery in this country in the last 30 plus years. The feds again! Blame the government for the increase in fuel not the producers of oil. They are taxed 45% and are limited in areas to drill. We have the oil in the ground in America.

Westerholdiii 06:26:45 PM Apr 21 2008

Thirdsqurl... get a clue.

Westerholdiii 06:26:03 PM Apr 21 2008

Oil was rising way before the dollar became so weak... It is like any other bubble and will pop.... Unfortunately, each day the idiot traders have a new excuse to drive it up.... the dollar is their excuse now... last year was hurricanes... We are in a recession... demand will fall and eventually the price....

Charlenew777 06:16:07 PM Apr 21 2008

If the oil companies are making an ungodly profit, what's their problem? it's greed and we all know it, yet not one in goverment is doing anything about it. why????????????

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