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$4 A Gallon: National Gas Price Average Reaches Record

ADAM SCHRECK   06/ 9/08 08:42 AM ET   AP

Crazy Gas Prices

NEW YORK — The average price of regular gas crept up to $4 a gallon for the first time over the weekend, passing the once-unthinkable milestone just in time for the peak summer travel season.

Prices at the pump are expected to keep climbing, especially after last week's furious surge in oil prices, which neared $140 a barrel in a record-shattering rally Friday.

While Americans who have to drive will feel the biggest squeeze, the increased prices also translate into higher costs for consumers and businesses, who will be forced to shoulder increased costs for food and anything else that needs to be transported.

"I don't think we've felt quite the full impact of $138 or $139 a barrel oil," said Jason Toews, co-founder of fuel price research site GasBuddy.com.

Gas prices rolled past their latest threshold Sunday, increasing to $4.005 a gallon overnight from $3.988 the day before, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service.

Of course, drivers in many parts of the country have already been paying well above that price for some time.

California has seen some of the highest prices; a gallon there now averages $4.436 a gallon, the most in the country. Missourians are paying the least at the pump, with a gallon in the Show-Me State selling for a relatively cheap $3.802 a gallon.

Prices have risen by about 20 cents in the past three weeks, according to a report by the Lundberg Survey released Sunday.

Truckers and others with diesel engines under the hood have it even worse off. A gallon of diesel now sells for $4.762, up nearly a penny overnight, according to AAA and OPIS. Prices hit a record atop $4.79 at the end of May.

Skyrocketing oil prices, which are trading at more than double their level last year, are largely to blame for the surge. Crude prices shot up more than 13 percent late last week in their biggest two-day price gain in history.

Benchmark light, sweet crude for July delivery officially finished the week at $138.54 on the New York Mercantile Exchange, but at one point jumped as high as $139.12.

"This could be a real weight on the economy," James Cordier, president of Tampa, Fla.-based trading firm Liberty Trading Group, said of oil's jump Friday. "With every nickel that gas goes up, people are driving less and less."

Oil's latest surge caught some longtime petroleum industry veterans off-guard, and left analysts wondering if it represented a one-time spike or the beginning of a new wave of advances.

Yolanda Cade, managing director of public relations at AAA, said gas prices are likely to rise further, although the automotive club is waiting to see where oil prices head this week before making any new predictions.

"We've cautioned gasoline station owners against not recklessly increasing retail prices just because of one big jump in the crude market," she said Sunday. "One day of trading doesn't constitute a market trend."

A number of factors are behind oil's ascent.

Soaring demand in Asia and elsewhere is ensuring global supplies remain tight even as Americans cut back; recent figures from the U.S. Energy Department's Energy Information Administration showed U.S. gasoline demand actually fell 1.4 percent over the last four weeks.

A tumbling dollar is also contributing to the increase. Many traders buy commodities such as oil as a hedge against inflation when the dollar is falling, and a weaker dollar makes oil cheaper for investors dealing in other currencies.

The rapid increase has also enticed speculators, frustrated by low returns elsewhere, looking to make a quick profit.

The influx of so much fresh money into energy markets has caught the attention of federal watchdogs. The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission recently said it has begun a probe of U.S. oil markets focused on possible price manipulation.

For many drivers, the higher gas prices mean rethinking everyday habits.

Some are reining in gas consumption, either by cutting back on all but the most essential driving or looking anew at alternatives like public transportation. Sales of gas-guzzling vans and sport utility vehicles are down, while those of fuel-efficient compacts and hybrids are on the rise.

Others are getting creative.

Take Robert Torrey of Connecticut, the state tied with Alaska as the second most expensive for gas. After leaving work in the town of Windsor Locks last week, he drove across the border into Massachusetts to fill up his van with $100 worth of gas. He figures he's saving about $10 per fill-up by traveling the 18 miles north.

"I let it run all the way down to the bottom before I get here," said Torrey, while pumping gas at the Pride station off I-91 in Springfield, Mass. "I try to combine it with other trips while I'm up here, so that makes it worth the drive."

___

Associated Press Writer Stephanie Reitz in Springfield, Mass., contributed to this report.

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NEW YORK — The average price of regular gas crept up to $4 a gallon for the first time over the weekend, passing the once-unthinkable milestone just in time for the peak summer travel season. P...
NEW YORK — The average price of regular gas crept up to $4 a gallon for the first time over the weekend, passing the once-unthinkable milestone just in time for the peak summer travel season. P...
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08:25 PM on 06/15/2008
1 trillion dollars over 10 years, would replace all imported oil, all nukes and all coal power with wind and solar.

sustainable forever.

Cheaper then war crimes.

See my profile for detailed calculations and links.
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booker52
avid reader
11:17 AM on 06/10/2008
There are three steps that could be taken today. I ask why aren't they being taken today?
Here is the link http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/40360.html
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booker52
avid reader
10:38 AM on 06/10/2008
I read this yesterday. Three steps that could drop the price of gas. Why aren't they being done???
Here is the link. http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/40360.html
11:36 AM on 06/10/2008
Part of the problem that since oil men Bush and Cheney have been in office the federal goverment has greatly relaxed it's oversight of futures trading. So every time Bernake or Bush make a dumb comment, or violence ticks up in Iraq or bad weather is forecast the prices go up; I read that about 30% of the current oil price is due to fear mongering. Jim Webb addressed this Saturday night in an interview on "The Tim Russert Show" on CNBC.

We hadn't raised the CAFE standards for 30 YEARS! I think it is a conflict of interest to have the govement controlling CAFE standards while a big part of their revenue on state and federal level comes from gas tax on every gallon of gas.
03:56 PM on 06/12/2008
"We hadn't raised the CAFE standards for 30 YEARS! I think it is a conflict of interest to have the govement controlling CAFE standards while a big part of their revenue on state and federal level comes from gas tax on every gallon of gas."

A big part? Now that would be total nonsense. I pay thousands of dollars every year in income tax, I buy a couple thousand dollars worth of gas of which 11% are tax, i.e. the total amount of my tax payment that is gasoline tax amounts to a couple hundred bucks, at most. Do the calculation for yourself.

If the government wanted to do the right thing, it would lower income taxes for the poor and raise the gasoline tax to 100%. Now that would work. Everything else is wishful thinking.
09:34 AM on 06/10/2008
Let me see if I have this in perspective...it's OK to pay $4 for a cup of coffee, but it's not OK to pay $4 for a gallon of gas.....Hmmmmmmm
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
06:53 AM on 06/10/2008
“The greatest thing to come out of (the Iraq war) for the world economy, if you could put it that way, would be $20 a barrel for oil. That’s bigger than any tax cut in the any country.”
–Rupert Murdoch, February 2003.
02:03 AM on 06/10/2008
Hey , nothing against the John Deere company, but when I see a television commercial showing them unloading this huge lawn tractor off the back of a semi into this guys yard thats no bigger than my front porch, isn't that promoting just the kind of overkill and waste this country doesn't need right now?? All these gasoline "toys" add up. Now is not the time to be pushing these kinds of products.
12:25 PM on 06/10/2008
It is called humor.
01:57 PM on 06/10/2008
thats probably why you are seeing so many ads! No one is buying them so they are adopting a more aggressive advertising plan.
01:34 AM on 06/10/2008
Hey where can I get that 4.09/gal. gas on the headline page?

Oh. That was yesterday's price.
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11:53 PM on 06/09/2008
Here's an idea: Let's get the execs from big tobacco to sit down in Congressional inquiry right next to the execs from big oil and see who lies the most.

I swear before god that tobacco is not addictive!

I swear before god that the price of gasoline is totally driven by "peak Oil!"

And other assorted fairy tales.
01:11 AM on 06/10/2008
The weird thing is... oil execs never talk about peak oil. They stay away from that topic like from no other. It's not good for your stock prices if you admit that your business model is not sustainable.
10:55 PM on 06/10/2008
In an unusual public statement, Sadad al-Husseini, Saudi Aramco's second-ranking executive and its leading geologist, warned at an oil conference in Jakarta in 2002 that global "natural declines in existing capacity are real and must be replaced."
11:01 PM on 06/10/2008
For more than two years now Chevron took out a series of “easy oil is over” adverts and willyoujoinus.com campaign, which can be seen in nearly all the leading journals and newspapers. The adverts are signed "Dave" - David O'Reilly, the company's chairman. These adverts contained following sentences: “one thing is clear: the era of easy oil is over ...Many of the world's oil and gas fields are maturing. And new energy discoveries are mainly occurring in places where resources are difficult to extract - physically, technically, economically, and politically….The world is currently burning 2 barrels of oil for every barrel of new oil discovered.”

“Oil will peak - that is a geologic fact. But the new energy equation is not static. It is dynamic and variable.” - David J. O'Reilly, Chairman and CEO. 21 September 2005.
01:58 PM on 06/12/2008
P&F, I've posted quotes from industry insiders re peak oil, in their view, and not one response in rebuttal...Why is it always to hard to find one "peak oil" conspiracy theorist when you need one? LOL
10:43 PM on 06/09/2008
Where do Bill Clinton and ALGORE fit into this problem?? Let's see, they lead the nation for 8 years, claiming record employment, a great economy, no wars.........yet they did NOTHING to bring about a decent energy policy for this country. That would have been the time to invest not only in new technology, but also drilling for oil here at home as well. If we had acted then, we wouldn't be in this crisis now. Instead they spent their time appeasing the far left environmentalist, and chose to do nothing.......especially the NO DRILLING for oil. Lets give these guys a big round of applause, we can thank them for the $4 (almost $5) per gallon fuel we are paying for today! We had a perfect opportunity to become "independent" of foreign oil, and we chose not to.
11:11 PM on 06/09/2008
Ummm, look this up, but Gore had goal for a major agenda to increase mpg requirements substantially among other initiatives, with the full support of Clinton. However, they were up against a Republican Congress that cried foul ball and swore that the auto industry and big business would utterly fail because the cost would be so extreme. I remember this well. Granted, I think they could have pushed the Republican congress and big business harder, but oil was so cheap, Clinton and Gore didn't have much leverage to beef up their argument, more's the pity.
12:29 PM on 06/10/2008
>> "Republican Congress that cried foul ball and swore that the auto industry and big
>> business would utterly fail because the cost would be so extreme"

And now they are failing because they didn't make that much smaller investment to make their cars more efficient. I guess republicans were right about the possibility of business failure, but for completely the opposite reason they expected.
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Kassandra
Idiot savant artistic genius
10:09 AM on 06/10/2008
You might as well go back to the Carter administration and badger HIM; except, OH! you might have to criticize Ronny Reagan for pulling down all those solar panels off the White House.

If we'd followed Carter's initiatives, we'd NEVER HAVE GOTTEN INTO THIS MESS in the first place. But Carter was such a bad, bad, president...it MUST be true, the Republicans all say it. ;>}

Carter is a visionary.

You prolly don't remember him or maybe you weren't born yet.........?
yappnmutt
humping legs for liberty
10:11 PM on 06/09/2008
the silver lining in high gas prices is a break from flat landers and their ridiculous urban ways polluting the scenery.
10:35 PM on 06/09/2008
Or better yet, put the Hummers back in the military where they belong. I'm tired of all these Joe wannabe's clogging up the roads
Gasparilla
bottled water = environmental disaster
09:30 PM on 06/09/2008
A lot of the conservative commentators are now big talkers about alternate energy. Of course, back when oil was a lot cheaper, guys like Limbaugh mocked any effort to increase mileage standards. You have a right to own that big SUV, he said. Now that we're in this position, he wants everyone to forget the hand he had in it. Look at any vote in the last 30 years to increase mileage standards, and a majority of Democrats voted for, and a majority of Republicans against.
09:24 PM on 06/09/2008
Buy a fuel efficient new Hyundai, they are excellent, excellent cars. There are great deals to be found on a nice, new V W with a diesel engine. Use refined, recycled cooking oil to drive cheap. This is one of the areas where Biodiesel is an excellent alternative fuel.

We could also use domestically and RESPONSIBLY produced Biodiesel as the exclusive fuel resource for transport. To take the emissions of material transport vehicles out of the atmosphere and to control the fuel costs. Ultimately benefitting businesses and consumers.

Why can't we move forward with this? Do you think it could be due to the corruption and cronyism of the White House of G. W. Bush and Richard B. Cheney, The Republican party, The Oil Cartels, Exxon Mobile and others in the Energy Industry, The Saudi's, The U.S. Military, Russian interests, China and the People's Liberation Army ? I think it could.

These are the people that would rather see our civilizations fall into another world war and see many millions of poor people starve to death than allow us to move sainly towards true energy independence.
We as consumers can force the issue however and adapt our societal consumption habits to make the changes necessary to ensure our survival
09:16 PM on 06/09/2008
DJIA is based upon banking & oil. Banking and oil are monopolies. The complete deregulation
of these monopolies is no accident. Just ask the Bilderbergers---who had Hillary as their
honey-bunney a year ago. What say we get back to the Constitution?
Or has the truth become "evil"?
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Meggie
Your micro-bio did not meet our guidelines.
09:02 PM on 06/09/2008
THANKS GEORGE. THANKS REPUBLICANS. I say it every time I fill up!
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ErnestineBass
No longer a cog in The Machine.
09:18 PM on 06/09/2008
Good for you.

I cuss 'em like a sailor with a sore toe.
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Kassandra
Idiot savant artistic genius
08:53 PM on 06/09/2008
I think this is a GOOD thing. Since Americans ONLY respond/pay attention when our pockets are pinched, it's waking most people up who've had their heads in the sand 'til now.

"Increasing supply is a knee-jerk reaction you would expect from politicians. It's politically expedient to say we have to produce more ... it's intellectually lazy," Nair said.

"But look at long-term issues facing the world ... it doesn't take a genius to understand we have to reduce the amount of oil we consume."

Link: http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/4C9C8DC4-BEB8-4404-BEB9-81D0ECF931DD.htm

The problem is not lack of oil. The problem is that everyone who has it is sitting on it. We went into Iraq NOT to steal the oil, but keep it on the ground. There's plenty of oil. this is just another conspiracy to enrich the fat cats. They won't be happy until they've stripped the last $ out of our wallets and wrecked the planet.

AND they don't care about America because they aren't Americans. Most of the corporations doing "business" in the USA are now owned by foreign countries. In fact, most of America is now owned by foreign governments. Your foreclosed house is probably owned by the Saudis or the Italians or who knows?

I can't be upset about the price of gas if it helps get us off the damn stuff. We've nearly ruined the planet from using it over just the last 150 years.
01:30 AM on 06/10/2008
They are sitting on it? They don't want to give it to us? Oh my goodness! That takes the discussion to a whole new level! It's like the kid in the play yard that does not want to let you play with his toys.

Anyway, if you are interested in the environment, an oil shock is the last thing you want. It will lead to a knee-jerk reaction of firing up the coal to liquid plants all over the world. And that would put the warming into "global warming".