Valley gas prices jump about 9 cents in month


STAFF/WIRE REPORTS

Gasoline prices in the Mahoning Valley have jumped about 9 cents in the past month as oil prices have reached record highs.

Oil prices reached record highs for the seventh straight session Wednesday after refineries in California and Texas said they had new outages and the government reported surprisingly large declines in oil inventories.

Though oil futures jumped to a new trading high of $82.51 a barrel in the moments after the inventory report was released in the morning, they spent much of the day alternating between gains and losses before reports of refinery outages led to late-session buying.

Dow Jones Newswires reported that ExxonMobil Corp. shut down a crude processing unit at its 348,000-barrel-a-day refinery in Beaumont, Texas, and that a piece of gasoline-making equipment at Chevron’s 266,000-barrel-a-day refinery in El Segundo, Calif., had been shut down. The impact on production was unclear.

The daily report from the AAA said Wednesday that the average price for regular gas in the Youngstown-Warren area was $2.78 a gallon, compared with $2.68 a month earlier. A year ago, the price was $2.31.

Nationwide, pump prices rose 0.3 cent overnight Tuesday to a national average of $2.79 a gallon, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service. Gas prices, which typically lag the futures market, peaked at $3.23 a gallon in late May.

Mixed report

Analysts said Wednesday’s report from the Energy Department’s Energy Information Administration was mixed.

Crude inventories fell last week, but much of that decline appears to be because Hurricane Humberto disrupted shipping and refinery operations along the Gulf Coast, said Tim Evans, an analyst at Citigroup Inc.

Crude inventories fell by 3.8 million barrels during the week ended Sept. 14, the EIA said, more than double the 1.5 million-barrel decline analysts surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires, on average, had expected. However, crude inventories remain at the upper end of their average range for this time of year, the EIA said.

Crude supplies dropped much more along the Gulf than at the key Nymex delivery point of Cushing, Okla.

“It’s perhaps less of a support to the market than it might appear at first glance,” Evans said.

Refinery utilization fell by 0.9 percentage point to 89.6 percent of capacity. Analysts expected a decline of 0.5 percentage point. However, gasoline supplies rose by 400,000 barrels, the EIA said, countering analyst predictions of a 1.3 million-barrel decline.

Demand, meanwhile, fell by 146,000 barrels last week.

“Demand is a little bit languid at this point,” said Linda Rafield, senior oil analyst at Platts, the energy research arm of McGraw-Hill Cos.

Many analysts attribute the lower demand to high gas prices and the end of the peak summer driving season.