Page added on August 8, 2012
Retail gasoline prices in the U.S. Midwest were as much as 50 cents higher than in the rest of the country. By Monday, the price of a gallon of regular unleaded jumped 13 cents from last week in Detroit to settle at $3.99. The spike in retail gasoline prices follows a series of pipeline spills in Wisconsin and refinery shutdowns in Chicago and elsewhere. The impact of the string of industrial incidents on consumers in the region may be short-lived, but retail prices rarely decline as fast as they increase.
The American Automobile Association, in its daily gasoline report, states a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline in Detroit cost $4.05, up from the $3.69 average just one week ago. Chicago drivers, meanwhile, were paying on average $4.39 per gallon, a 10 percent increase from last week. According to AAA, the national average for a gallon of regular unleaded is $3.62. While that’s a far cry from the national spikes early this year, the regional blow has irked many area residents wary of high consumer prices and pipeline incidents.
An industry analyst said much of the region was hit by “a cluster of bad luck.” Last month, pipeline company Enbridge reported a leak on a pipeline in Wisconsin. A section of the Lakehead oil pipeline system ruptured there, cutting off oil supplies to Chicago-area refineries. U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray Lahood said the incident was “absolutely unacceptable” and forced Enbridge to keep the line closed until authorities review a restart plan for the entire 467-mile pipeline.
In Michigan, the state’s governor last month issued a fuel emergency in response to the rupture of pipeline that released 1,000 barrels of unleaded gasoline in eastern Wisconsin. Gov. Rick Snyder’s emergency declaration lifted the restrictions placed on long-haul truckers so they could deliver retail petroleum products. Less than two weeks later, Enbridge confirmed that 1,200 barrels of oil spilled from Line 14 in central Wisconsin. A nearby resident said the pipeline “blew like an oil well.”
Enbridge maintains that “better than 99.999 percent” of the time, there are no problems with its vast network of oil pipelines in the United States. When accidents do happen, however, they’re costly. Last year’s oil spill in Michigan, on the same network as the Wisconsin leak, was the costliest onshore incident in U.S. history and EPA authorities are still reporting sheen in some of the waterways soiled by the release. Refineries, meanwhile, have shut down at a time when the region is using “summertime gasoline,” a blend not manufactured very much outside of the Midwest.
Patrick DeHaan, a petroleum analyst at reporting Web site gasbuddy.com, told a Chicago newspaper that the regional spike in gasoline prices is temporary and likely “the last hiccup” for the summer. Nevertheless, gasoline prices rarely experience a 10 percent decline overnight.
“As we all know, (retail prices) only move down by pennies per day,” he said.
5 Comments on "US Midwest Hit By Perfect Gasoline Storm"
BillT on Wed, 8th Aug 2012 1:57 pm
“Pipelines are totally safe!” (Quote from the KeyStone Pipeline crowd.)
“… the rupture of pipeline that released 1,000 barrels of unleaded gasoline in eastern Wisconsin…”
“… Less than two weeks later, Enbridge confirmed that 1,200 barrels of oil spilled from Line 14 in central Wisconsin…”
Nuff said.
Kenz300 on Wed, 8th Aug 2012 2:24 pm
It is time to end the oil monopoly on transportation fuels. Bring on the electric, flex-fuel, hybrid, CNG, LNG and hydrogen fueled vehicles. A monopoly is only good for the monopoly and not good for the consumer. We need a choice at the pump.
BillT on Thu, 9th Aug 2012 12:14 am
Kenz, you have a choice, premium or leaded…lol. THAT is the only choice you are going to get. You should have started arguing for choice about 100 years ago when Big Auto bought out the makers of electric cars.
BillT on Thu, 9th Aug 2012 12:15 am
Ooops…I meant ‘premium or regular’. My mind still thinks of gas as leaded or unleaded.
DC on Thu, 9th Aug 2012 11:00 am
Id love to see Ken tooling around in a 500k Hydrogen Fool-cell car(that he wont even be allowed to actually own), and paying 15-20 dollars a gallon equivalent for extremely leak-prone hydrogen gas. Problem is, if he stopped to tell people walking or biking how hes shown that evil oil monopoly once and for all, about 5% of his hydrogen would have evaporated into the atmosphere. Or just as funny, his flex-fool car, which lets face, means gas, or corn-bio-fools. Which of course have such a pathetic EROI, that they cant even be considered an energy source. Toss up which is worse, bio-fools that convert 1 barrel of oil into one barrel of bio-cornfuel, or H2, which has a actually costs more energy to make than the resulting h2 ‘fuel’ can ever deliver.
Want to end the monopoly there Kenz? Then walk, or bike, or take the train(if you can find one in amerika that will actually somewhere you need to go. Thats your only option. Electric is the only thing remotely close on your list, but GM and Firestone and Chevron crushed that option 70 years ago. In its place, they threw up suburbia and L.A. Places designed specifically NOT to work with mass-transit or electic anything….