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Average diesel price jumps nearly a dime

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Old 02-05-2013, 09:21 AM
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Average diesel price jumps nearly a dime

By Kimberely Lennard, Land Line staff writer

The U.S. Energy Information Administration reports the national average price of diesel at $4.022, an increase of 9.5 cents over last week and 16.6 cents above the same week last year.

The West Coast region less California saw the highest increase at 13 cents, with California reporting the highest average overall at $4.242. Diesel prices in the Rocky Mountain region were the lowest nationwide at $3.844.

The price of diesel as reported by EIA for each region is as follows:

U.S. – $4.022, up 9.5 cents
East Coast – $4.088, up 6.5 cents
New England – $4.237, up 5.6 cents
Central Atlantic – $4.165, up 5.9 cents
Lower Atlantic – $4.001, up 7 cents
Midwest – $3.978, up 11.2 cents
Gulf Coast – $3.941, up 9.6 cents
Rocky Mountain – $3.844, up 10.8 cents
West Coast – $4.166, up 11.7 cents
West Coast less California – $4.076, up 13 cents
California – $4.242, up 10.5 cents


ProMiles, which surveys diesel prices daily at 9,400 truck stops, reported diesel prices at $4.02, an increase of a penny overnight and a hike of 11.6 cents over this past Monday. Connecticut drivers paid the most for diesel at an average of $4.503, while Montana drivers registered the lowest at $3.533, nearly a dollar per gallon less.

In separate energy news, midday trading in New York showed light sweet crude oil prices at $96.25, a decrease of $1.52 from Friday and an increase of 7 cents over Monday. Light sweet crude is the type most commonly associated with diesel production.

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Price spike continues for diesel and gasoline

Feb. 5, 2013 by Sean Kilcarr - FleetOwner staff writer

Diesel and gasoline prices continued to rise this week, jumping 9.5 cents and 18.1 cents per gallon, respectively, compared to the week of January 28, according to data tracked by the Energy Information Administration (EIA).

The agency added that retail pump prices for both fuels are up over 12 cents and 22 cents per gallon, respectively, over the last two weeks.

The EIA reported that the U.S. average for diesel now rests at $4.022 per gallon, some 16.6 cents per gallon higher compared to the same week in 2012. Prices are up in every region of the U.S. the agency added, with California ($4.242 per gallon), New England ($4.232), the Central Atlantic ($4.165) and lower Atlantic ($4.008) home to the highest prices for the fuel in the nation.

Gasoline reached a U.S. average of $3.538 per gallon this week, EIA said; 5.6 cents per gallon higher compared to the same week in 2012. The agency again stated that gasoline prices are up in every region of the U.S., with the West Coast ($3.936 per gallon), New England ($3.682), and the Central Atlantic ($3.665) home to the highest retail pump prices in the country.

The EIA also noted that gasoline expenditures in 2012 for the average U.S. household reached $2,912, or just under 4% of income before taxes – the highest estimated percentage of household income spent on gasoline in nearly three decades, with the exception of 2008, when the average household spent a similar amount.

Although overall gasoline consumption has decreased in recent years, the agency said, that rise in average gasoline prices has led to higher overall household gasoline expenditures.

Still, those expenditures as a percentage of overall household income are still low when compared to the early 1980s, when the estimated portion of household income spent on gasoline surpassed 5%. That’s largely because, even though travel per household is up significantly since the early 1980s, vehicle fuel efficiency is also significantly improved, thus reducing the amount of gasoline used per mile, according to the agency.

Indeed, efficiency gains have accelerated in recent years such that total U.S. gasoline consumption fell in 2011 to 134.2 billion gallons – its lowest level since 2001. Yet, at the same time, EIA's average city retail gasoline price rose 26.1% in 2011, and another 3.3% in 2012, when it reached $3.70 per gallon, meaning that higher prices in 2011 and 2012 outweighed the effect of reduced consumption.

The fiscal impact of that fuel increase on U.S. households is heavy, EIA noted in its report, as that 26.1% yearly increase back in 2011 for average city retail gas prices was six times greater than the 3.4% rise in nominal household income, while that 3.3% estimated gasoline price rise in 2012 outpaced the 2.9% estimated increase in household income.
 
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Old 02-05-2013, 06:08 PM
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Bump for the east-coasters .
 
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Old 02-05-2013, 08:49 PM
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I heard on Fox news the increase was related to the fed printing a lot of money....
 
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