Drivers see cost of fuel tick up

Jeremy Heskett of Boston fills his car with gasoline at a Shell gas station in Westwood, Mass., in this Feb. 18, 2021, file photo. (AP/Steven Senne)
Jeremy Heskett of Boston fills his car with gasoline at a Shell gas station in Westwood, Mass., in this Feb. 18, 2021, file photo. (AP/Steven Senne)

Drivers are noticing higher prices at the pump thanks to weather-related production disruptions, according to an analysis published by the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.

"Summer driving season is fast approaching, and after a year of severely curtailed travel due to the pandemic, people are itching to get on the road," said John Anderson, an economist with the UA System Division of Agriculture and the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences.

Over the past year, Anderson has been providing analysis of how covid-19 has affected many facets of the economy, including meat prices, consumer spending and employment.

Anderson said that for the week ending April 5, the average retail price of gasoline in the United States was $2.945 per gallon.

"This is about even with prices in late-spring and early-summer 2019, but it is far higher than the pandemic-induced low of $1.87 per gallon in late-April 2020," he said.

While the Energy Information Administration doesn't break out Arkansas prices, the state is included in its Petroleum Administration for Defense District 3, known as PADD3. The district includes Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, and Texas.

"The PADD3 average retail gasoline price hit $2.693 per gallon near the end of March before retreating almost a nickel in the subsequent two weeks," Anderson said. "This is a lower average than the U.S. price, but the increase since the first of the year has been greater: U.S. prices have gone up about 25 percent since the first week of the year; PADD3 prices have gone up about 35 percent over that same period."

"Prices in the PADD3 region are the highest since June 2018," he said.

Some of this is because of production disruption from extreme cold in late February, as well as refiners slowing to change gears to production of summer formulations. Anderson also said "Anecdotally, some localized shortages have even developed."

Looking ahead

Looking down the road, the increases aren't expected to continue as steeply.

"Despite expectations for strong seasonal demand, bolstered by a steady return to more normal post-pandemic activity, retail gasoline prices are likely to begin to moderate as the supply side of the market recovers from the recent shocks," he said. "Total gasoline stocks, which include not only finished gasoline but also major gasoline blending components, have already turned up -- recovering a bit faster than the market anticipated."

Find all of the covid related analysis at https://www.uaex.uada.edu/life-skills-wellness/health/covid19/COVID-Economic_Impacts_in_Arkansas.aspx. Follow the agency on Twitter at @AgInArk, @uaex_edu or @ArkAgResearch. Find 4-H information at https://4h.uaex.edu/.

-- Mary Hightower is the chief communications officer at the UA System Division of Agriculture.

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