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Americans Begin Driving Less As Gas Prices Continue To Rise

Gas Prices

By CHRIS KAHN   04/11/11 09:47 AM ET   AP

NEW YORK -- With the price of gas above $3.50 a gallon in all but one state, there are signs that Americans are cutting back on driving, reversing a steady increase in demand for fuel as the economy improves.

Gas sales have fallen for five straight weeks, the first time that has happened since November, according to MasterCard SpendingPulse, which tracks spending at 140,000 service stations nationwide.

Before the decline, demand was increasing for two months. Some analysts had expected the trend to continue because the economic recovery is picking up, adding 216,000 jobs in March.

"More people are going to work," said John Gamel, director of gasoline research for MasterCard. "That means more people are driving and they should be buying more gas."

Instead, about 70 percent of the nation's major gas-station chains say sales have fallen, according to a March survey by the Oil Price Information Service. More than half reported a drop of 3 percent or more – the sharpest since the summer of 2008, when gas soared past $4 a gallon.

This year, gas prices have shot up as unrest in North Africa and the Middle East rattled energy markets and increased global demand for crude oil squeezed supplies. A gallon of unleaded regular costs $3.77 on average, and only Wyoming has an average lower than $3.50. Gas is already 41 cents more expensive then at this point in 2008, when it peaked at $4.11 in July.

Most analysts are sticking to forecasts of a high of $4 a gallon, though some have predicted $5 gas.

Across the country, some drivers are already hunting for cheaper gas, sometimes with the help of a mobile phone app. Others are checking out bus and train schedules, reconsidering mass transportation, or trading in their SUV for a more fuel-efficient model.

Kim Cramer, who works for Radio Flyer in Chicago, has started walking and carpooling more. She's also learned to be choosy, buying gas in suburbs, where she's learned she can save as much as 20 cents a gallon.

"I try to fill up anywhere besides the city," she said.

About two and a half days' worth of Whitney Shaw's pay each month goes just to fill up her 2001 Hyundai Accent. The administrative assistant is thinking about taking the bus for her daily commute, 50 miles each way between Branford, Conn., and Hartford.

"It's three hours of pay from work just to fill up my tank even once, so I'm definitely feeling it," Shaw said while filling up for $3.61 a gallon at a Valero station on the Berlin Turnpike.

Americans also appear to be turning to smaller, more fuel-efficient cars to save on gas. Sales of the Hyundai Sonata and Elantra soared 55 percent in March. Meanwhile, sales of Chevy's Suburban SUV dropped nearly 24 percent.

MasterCard's report shows drivers bought 2.7 billion gallons of gas last week, down 3.6 percent from the same period in 2010, when it was 80 cents cheaper.

The decline is somewhat puzzling because Americans typically curb their driving only as a last resort, after sacrificing other forms of discretionary spending, like shopping for new clothes, or going to movies, concerts and restaurants.

But demand for gas is falling while other types of spending are on the rise. Retail sales rose 2 percent in March compared with a year earlier, surprising economists who were expecting no increase or even a decline.

Gamel said it's too early to tell whether this is the kind of long-term decline in demand that the economy endured during the recession. Prices already are in the range when Americans started to leave their cars in the driveway several years ago. Drivers began to cut back on gas in October 2007, when the national average approached $3 per gallon.

Even if demand for gas keeps falling in the U.S., it probably won't be enough to force the price down. That's because worldwide demand for crude oil keeps rising.

Global demand for oil is about 87 million barrels per day, matching its peak from 2007. It is expected to grow to more than 88 million barrels a day by year's end, with most of the increase coming from China. At the same time, supply is shrinking because of uprisings in Libya and elsewhere in the Middle East.

In the United States, people are watching their local gas stations a little more carefully. Some are even getting rid of their old gas-guzzler.

Andrea Meyer of Manteno, Ill., has done both. She buys gas in the middle of the week because prices seem to jump over the weekend. And she recently sold her 2005 Chevy Envoy SUV and bought a 2011 Chevy Cruze, which gets 30 miles per gallon. She still spent about $200 on gas for the new car from mid-February to mid-March.

"I won't go hungry tomorrow," she says. "It's just taking away from me getting ahead faster. It throws off everything. It immediately makes you reprioritize."

___

Associated Press Writers Barbara Rodriguez in Chicago, Ben Dobbin in Rochester, NY, and Stephanie Reitz in Hartford, Conn. contributed to this story.

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NEW YORK -- With the price of gas above $3.50 a gallon in all but one state, there are signs that Americans are cutting back on driving, reversing a steady increase in demand for fuel as the economy i...
NEW YORK -- With the price of gas above $3.50 a gallon in all but one state, there are signs that Americans are cutting back on driving, reversing a steady increase in demand for fuel as the economy i...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:30 PM on 04/14/2011
Why is everyone so stirred up about gas prices? We received fair warning in 2008, so we have each had three years to make the adjusts to our personal consumption so that the current spike should have little real effect on our finances.
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MSROADKILL612
love auto biographys. any appS to write mine?
09:50 PM on 04/12/2011
Let me get this straight.

Given; oil is a global market, we are clearly on the cusp of peak oil (uncertainty about 2% of supply causes a major spike), US pays ~1/3 of many comparable countries, china now buys more autos than USA, partly oil fired electricity demand has gone ballistic globally...

But hey, thats not the problem according to 80% of posters. Its the repubs or the dems or long lost presidents, or speculators.

If the US collectively cant improve its logic, I am fearful.

What you should worry about is if it gets taxed like the rest of the world as it should.
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yougg
just a citizen
02:00 PM on 04/12/2011
At least we can buy gas. In the first old embargo in the 1970s gas wasn't always available. After all of these years we still don't have an energy policy. Before everybody had cars we got along just fine with trains, and other forms of mass transit. It would be preferable to go back to mass transit instead of letting a few entities accumilate all of the wealth. Guess we have to come up with our own individualized energy policy.
nothingchanges
too soon old, too late smart
12:04 PM on 04/12/2011
In 1987 I could buy a new car off the dealership floor that got 68 MPG. It wasn't a hybrid, it wasn't a twin turboed intercooled diesel. It was a simple, light, 4 cylinder, Honda with a manual transmission, and proper gearing.

The only reason the world wastes so much, is because someone somewhere makes a hefty profit off of it.

As long as decisions are determined by profit, rather than by logic, we will keep spiraling down the drain................for what?

So that a very small percentage of our neighbors can become so wealthy that it sickens the mind.

"Beam me up Scotty, there is no intelligent life on Earth"
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signgrrl
design & production
12:43 PM on 04/12/2011
in japan, 50 mpg minimum is MANDATORY
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:20 PM on 04/14/2011
The best gas rating for a 1987 Honda model was 51 MPH on highway for a Civic model no power steering, no power brakes, no air conditioning that weighted several hundred pounds less that the current models and had a smaller engine than current models. That was using the old rating system which averaged 10-15% higher that the rating system in use today. Using the new rating system the 1987 Civic comes in at 46 MPG highway, consumer reported actual averages were around 41 MPG. Here's MHG Civic ratings over the years.

http://www.mpgomatic.com/2007/10/16/honda-civic-gas-mileage-1978-2007/

I have a 2001 Toyota Echo which gets 46-51 MPG on the highway driving at 60-65 with power brakes, steering and air. If it had one gear higher, a sixth speed, I imagine it could get 55+ with no problem.

Meanwhile the monster pickups and SUVs, most with one person in the vehicle, continue to roll along at 80+ MPH.
nothingchanges
too soon old, too late smart
03:15 PM on 04/14/2011
I stand corrected. It was 1984 when the Honda Civic was rated for 67 MPG. I actually routinely get much higher mileage that EPA estimates. I drive gentle, I get 33-36 MPG on my 1993 Taurus Wagon with a 3.0 liter 6, rated by EPA at 17 MPG city- 25 highway.

In any event, there has been tremendous progress made in vehicular technology. Volkswagen makes a commuter car not available in the US that gets over 200 mpg.... (It would never sell here, only 8.5 HP diesel)

In my opinion the vast majority of American vehicles are over weight, way over powered, and geared wrong. Detroit has sold us on the concept that we need to be able to accelerate from 0-60 in less than 10 seconds. I don't suffer from that need, yet I will never be able to buy a fuel efficient vehicle in the US unless the government legislates it. So much for the free market system working for the betterment of us all.
Supply and demand is manipulated by profit, as is planned obsolescence, another wasteful human endeavor that makes some a great deal of money while costing most a great deal more. If only our decisions were based on logic, instead of profits. IMPO human intelligence is vastly over rated.
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spinotter11
Spinning through life and trying to understand it.
08:40 AM on 04/12/2011
If we were not a nation (and a world as well, let it be said) of oil addicts, the obvious solution would be to do away with our use of private transportation altogether. It could and should be done, but it won't be done and we will have lost a marvelous opportunity in every respect.
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dkrypt
Unencumbered by political correctness
07:21 AM on 04/12/2011
I paid $4.09 this morning. Impeach! Impeach for disallowing drilling in and near our country, for new war in Libya, for continuing old wars, for lies, for preferring Wall St. over Main St., for killing brown people, for preferring the rich, for Kill Teams . . . impeach!
ruburnt
Live Free or Die....
07:58 AM on 04/12/2011
Agreed, Trump said that Obama can't do anything about gas prices because he's such a Milquetoast that OPEC and the world have no respect for America anymore. I think he could be right....2012 election will come down to oil......
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aprilglaspie
11:30 AM on 04/12/2011
Nobody with a working brain thinks domestic drilling would would have an impact on US gas prices within the next 15 years. Nobody that 's not a naive toady to Republican-funding dirty energy corporations would believe that oil companies are not profiteering.
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dkrypt
Unencumbered by political correctness
11:49 AM on 04/12/2011
Nobody with a working brain thinks that we shouldn't tap domestic energy simply because it won't affect gasoline prices for a decade or more. Nobody but an unthinking, rhetoric-spewing, anti-business, anti-economy, dogmatic left winger would believe that an industry with modest profit margins (3% to 10%) was profiteering.
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dkrypt
Unencumbered by political correctness
07:15 AM on 04/12/2011
When gasoline hit $2.28, Impeach Bush campaigns sprung up: http://www.democrats.com/impeach-bush-cheney

Impeach Obama!
USBrit
And GOP Jesus said, I am come to help the rich.
04:30 PM on 04/12/2011
Private market prices are not an impeachable offense. That is the case whether the President is Bush or Obama.
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dkrypt
Unencumbered by political correctness
10:26 AM on 04/13/2011
You are correct. I just like applying Democrat's own "standards" to Democrats.
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MSROADKILL612
love auto biographys. any appS to write mine?
01:20 AM on 04/12/2011
2/

Encourage trucking companies to replace some of their fleet with CNG (or hybrid diesel/CNG if flexibility and range are an issue (CNG in the fuel mix makes the diesel burn better/cleaner too)) rigs.

schedule these trucks on routes accordingly, save heaps on fuel and begin to future proof their business. Selling CNG becomes profitable, and the network grows of its own accord w/o subsidies.

If USA do not do this, its prospects are grim. It has been built around the car. No car, no america, and from what I hear, the EPA is one of the biggest hindrances.

Hassle your rep today. google pickens cng congress - should get you on the right track.
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MSROADKILL612
love auto biographys. any appS to write mine?
01:14 AM on 04/12/2011
1/

its liquid fuels that are precious (hi energy to weight & runs zillions of legacy engines)

there is no global shortage of natural gas despite what you read _ take away power gen and there is a glut

natural gas is a substitute for liquid fuels for heavy transport (trains, trucks, ships & even hi mileage cars)

we are squandering oil on non transport applications (power gen, heating) & transport that could use gas

keep using coal but boost nuclear asap for baseload, encourage wind and googles initiatives in this area, forget solar panels (a pathetic daytime trickle charger that wouldnt survive any cost benefit analysis w/o subsidies (extend your bare arms on a sunny day - you can sense how little energy a solar panel is getting per sq", conversely, winds, waves, tides and currents are very concentrated power)). Solar hot water, however, is good in lower latitudes.

Start converting big transport liquid fuel users (Union Pacific alone use 2bn gallons of diesel p.a.) to cng asap, or there will be no alternative to ruinous oil prices while you belatedly spend a decade doing what should be started now.

Its easy and cheap. Provide subsidies as seed money for the easy targets. Initially loss making, strategic (both sides of the rockies? (all trucks have GPS and data loggers)), filling stations where heavy transport trunk routes intersect gas pipe infrastructure (almost everywhere in USA - no tankers required).
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MSROADKILL612
love auto biographys. any appS to write mine?
12:39 AM on 04/12/2011
Here in OZ, every other guy gets a car as part of their salary. It saves tax even if you dont need it for work. If you earn $100k +, the govt insists you lease a fancy car and drive like an idiot, or pay similar in tax.

Maybe these commuters in trucks are doing a similar number.
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kamact
Market Observer
12:35 AM on 04/12/2011
Our government snakes speculation,...Where a few can take from the many
12:17 AM on 04/12/2011
I hope Gas goes up to $10 a gallon. I want to laugh at the people who drive Hummers and Giant SUV's.
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07:10 AM on 04/12/2011
will you be laughing at the people less fortunate than yourself who can no longer afford 7$ bread and 15$ chicken?
01:47 PM on 04/12/2011
Europe's had double our gas prices for decades - how do they afford bread and chicken?
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02:24 PM on 04/14/2011
MrOctober, you're fanned. Everyone was served full notice in 2008 of the effects of 4.00 plus gasoline. Most ignored that warning and are now paying for that.
03:32 AM on 04/15/2011
It's really sad how short sighted Americans are. You would think the 2008 gas crunch was 50 years ago, the way it so quickly faded out of memory. Of course, no leadership doesn't help solve such problems.
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MikeyJaii
Free $$ For Everyone.
10:32 PM on 04/11/2011
NYSE can easily manipulate the price, pumping it up one day and the next second dropping it down. And repeating the process with the same bull crap excuse. Don't be dependent on the gas&oil buy more Eco-friendly vehicles.
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johngary66
Accused of heresy and decided to go with that.
10:15 PM on 04/11/2011
The last time gas prices went to these levels we heard nothing from the Corporate owned mainstream media about investors raising the prices without even having to put any money down. I would be surprised if the same thing isn't happening again.since nothing was ever done about it. We certainly can't expect Obama to show any leadership since it's his rich buddies doing it. Where are the rest of the Democrats? They have been letting Obama get away with working for Wall Street over Main Street for two plus years now. We badly need a new progressive party that will look out for the people and refuse Corporate money. 2012 is going to be a big surprise for a lot of politicians in both partys.
holyghostie
Spiritus est qui vivificat
10:32 PM on 04/11/2011
Spot on. A lot of this is being caused by speculators. Still we would benefit from more fuel efficient vehicles. I thought a few manufacturers were coming out with clean diesels...but I haven't seen them.
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clsmithj
Wanna Raise Some Hell
10:12 PM on 04/11/2011
so glad I filled up today at $3.83 a gal at the cheap gas station than those name brand gas stations (BP, Shell, Mobile, Marathon, Speedway are the expensive stations).