Gas prices near a Labor Day weekend record
Posted by Xeno on September 3, 2011
Gasoline is nearly the highest it’s ever been for this time of year, just ahead of the Labor Day weekend.
The run-up in oil prices this year, combined with a rash of refining problems throughout the U.S., has boosted pump prices. The national average on Thursday was $3.629 per gallon. Drivers will pay more for gasoline this Sept. 1 than in any other year except 2008, when pump prices hit an average of $3.686.
Retail gasoline prices are rising in the U.S. even though motorists are buying less. Analysts say they have been pushed higher by a steady rise in international gasoline demand. Americans may be using less, but drivers in developing nations are using more.
“It’s all part of being in a global market,” said Tom Kloza, publisher and chief oil analyst at Oil Price Information Service.
Americans are using so little gasoline that the U.S. has been a net exporter of refined fuels to other countries for the past nine weeks. That’s typical for OPEC countries, but it’s extremely rare for the U.S. “You have to go back years and years,” Kloza said. “I haven’t found a time when we’ve been a net exporter for that many weeks.”
Most of those exports head to Mexico and Canada. The U.S. also sends fuel to dozens of other countries; including the Netherlands, Singapore, Japan, Ecuador, Panama, Chile and Colombia.
via Gas prices near a Labor Day weekend record – Business – Oil & energy – msnbc.com.
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Gasoline is nearly the highest it’s ever been for this time of year, just ahead of the Labor Day weekend.