Energy

Why Gas Prices May Rise This Spring

A male hand pumping gas into a car.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Don’t look now, but gas prices are starting to climb, just in time for the start of the spring road trip season. While still far cheaper than last year, when the national average price of regular unleaded shot past $5 per gallon, the price at the pump is getting into uncomfortable territory again.

Travel website AAA reports that the national average is $3.62 per gallon, up almost a dime from this time a week ago. And more increases are in store as the weather continues to warm up, with several of the factors that control gas prices pointing to costlier fill-ups.

What’s Causing Gas Prices to Rise this Spring

For starters, the price of crude oil — the raw material gasoline is made from — recently ticked up because of a surprise move by OPEC and its allies to reduce the amount of crude they export. The announcement that OPEC is cutting back output by about 500,000 barrels per day caused oil prices to perk up. The U.S. benchmark for crude, West Texas Intermediate, rose from a recent low of about $67 per barrel to over $80 in a matter of days. That jump in oil is now gradually showing up at the retail level at gas stations across the country.

The increase in oil prices comes at a bad time, because demand for gas and other refined fuels tends to also surge in the spring, when many Americans hit the roads for vacation. That extra demand typically pushes up gas prices starting in late winter or early spring in most years, with peak prices often arriving around Memorial Day weekend. This year seems to be following that pattern.

 

Categories
EnergyMoney