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Home Front Economy
Gas May Soon Cost a Sawbuck
2008-04-28
Get ready for another economic shock of major proportions — a virtual doubling of prices at the gas pump to as much as $10 a gallon.

A customer pumps gas in Los Angeles, where self-serve regular gasoline exceeds 4 dollars a gallon.ThatÂ’s the message from a couple of analytical energy industry trackers, both of whom, based on the surging oil prices, see considerably more pain at the pump than most drivers realize.

Gasoline nationally is in an accelerated upswing, having jumped to $3.58 a gallon from $3.50 in just the past week. In some parts of the country, including New York City and the West Coast, gas is already sporting a price tag above $4 a gallon. There was a pray-in at a Chevron station in San Francisco on Friday led by a minister asking God for cheaper gas, and an Arco gas station in San Mateo, Calif., has already raised its price to a sky-high $4.62.

In Manhattan, at a Mobil gas station at York Avenue and East 61st Street, premium gas is now $4.03 a gallon. Two days ago, it was $3.96. Why such a high price? “Blame the people at STOPEC (he meant OPEC) and the oil companies,” an attendant there told me.

These increases are taking place before the all-important summer driving season, signaling even higher prices ahead.

That’s also the outlook of the Automobile Association of America. “As long as the price of crude oil stays above $100 a barrel, drivers will be forced to pay more and more at the gas pump,” a AAA spokesman, Troy Green, said.

Oil recently hit an all-time high of nearly $120 a barrel, more than double its early 2007 price of about $50 a barrel. It closed Friday at $118.52.

The forecasts calling for a jump to between $7 and $10 a gallon are based on the view that the price of crude is on its way to $200 in two to three years.

Translating this price into dollars and cents at the gas pump, one of our forecasters, the chairman of Houston-based Dune Energy, Alan Gaines, sees gas rising to $7–$8 a gallon. The other, a commodities tracker at Weiss Research in Jupiter, Fla., Sean Brodrick, projects a range of $8 to $10 a gallon.

While $7–$10 a gallon would be ground-breaking in America, these prices would not be trendsetting internationally. For example, European drivers are already shelling out $9 a gallon (which includes a $2-a-gallon tax).

Canadians are also being hit with rising gas prices. They are paying the American-dollar equivalent of $4.92 a gallon, and theyÂ’re being told to brace themselves for prices above $5.65 a gallon this summer.

Early last year, with a barrel of oil trading in the low $50s and gasoline nationally selling in a range of $2.30 to $2.50 a gallon, Mr. Gaines — in an impressive display of crystal ball gazing — accurately predicted oil was $100-bound and that gasoline would follow suit by reaching $4 a gallon.

His latest prediction of $200 oil is open to question, since it would undoubtedly create considerable global economic distress. Further, just about every energy expert I talk to cautions me to expect a sizable pullback in oil prices, maybe to between $50 and $70 a barrel, especially if thereÂ’s a global economic slowdown.

While Mr. Gaines thinks there could be a temporary decline in the oil price, heÂ’s convinced an overall uptrend is unstoppable. In fact, he thinks his $200 forecast could be conservative, and that perhaps $250 could be reached. His reasoning: a combination of shrinking supply and increasing demand, especially from China, India, and America.

Mr. BrodrickÂ’s $200 oil forecast is largely predicated on a combination of pretty flat supply and rip-roaring demand. Other key catalysts include surging demand in China and India, where auto sales are booming, and major supply disruptions in Nigeria and also in Mexico, our second-largest source of oil imports, where oil production has fallen off a cliff.

More factors include the ever-present danger of additional supply disruptions from volatile countries in the Middle East that are not our allies, and the unwillingness of SUV-loving Americans to trim their unquenchable thirst for foreign oil. Likewise, for the first time, emerging markets this year will use more oil than America.

Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#15  I'll believe we have a gas crisis when I see us drilling ANWR, the eastern Gulf coast, and the deposits off California and North Carolina. Not before.
Posted by: Steve White   2008-04-28 22:48  

#14  Start with algore, and work down...

Gorebots head goes on a pike, and then a 24x7 webcam feed so people can check in every now and then to see how the decomp is going.

For the rest of the usual suspects you refer too, the slowest and most painful death imaginable. Televised...Pay Per View!
Posted by: Muggsy Jaitle9983   2008-04-28 22:33  

#13  We're getting close to the time for some taring, feathering and lynching.

Start with algore, and work down through the Sierra Club, Greenpeace, and every other "environmental" bunch of whackos that are trying their damnedness to destroy this nation. I'll bring a rope and an axehandle.

I think the Dummycritters will take care of themselves in Denver this August.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2008-04-28 22:25  

#12  Remember its the dollar that's falling, not that the commodity is quickly rising.

So? The effect is still the same. Lot's of people I know are having trouble getting to work, even with economical cars.

I sold my truck and bought a 40mpg auto 4 months ago due to rising prices, now, as things continue to rise out of sight I am approaching the same problem. I can't afford to drive no matter the MPG my car gets.

We're getting close to the time for some taring, feathering and lynching.
Posted by: Muggsy Jaitle9983   2008-04-28 22:08  

#11  What's the gas tax in the Bay Area? Just curious.
Posted by: eLarson   2008-04-28 22:07  

#10  Remember its the dollar that's falling, not that the commodity is quickly rising. When the government buys a product or service, it gets something for the money [regardless of amount of padding]. When the government dumps hundreds of billions on the credit/speculation market it creates a chase for limited resources. Which one depends upon what the speculators want to play with. Like oil itself, the funding of credit/speculation is fungible, money is simply shifted around by the players.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-04-28 20:37  

#9  $3.40 2 days ago for 87 octane.
Posted by: ed   2008-04-28 20:13  

#8  ...an Arco gas station in San Mateo, Calif., has already raised its price to a sky-high $4.62.

Wow. I paid $4.18 here and felt ripped off...
Posted by: Angie Schultz   2008-04-28 20:09  

#7  I think one of Stein's laws is that if something cannot go on, it won't, and IIRC liquid fuel above $50/bbl creates a deluge of competition, which is probably a year or two off.

The trick is to not allow OPEC to recover its market control as prices crash and competition comes online - perhaps an adjustable tariff on oil imports dedicated to support grain exports, domestic farm subsidies, and African agricultural development to feed the world?

Chaos is creating huge opportunities.
Posted by: Harcourt Jush7795   2008-04-28 20:03  

#6  This is how we pay for the housing bubble costs.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-04-28 19:49  

#5  Why not $25 a gallon? Why not $50? WTF? If the govt. doesn't want to do ANYTHING about this then I guess the entire economy and transportation sector can crash in flames. I'll be fine eating wild game and fish. But it might suck for you city dwelling types.
Maybe Ted Turner was right about the cannibalism thing. Lets bar-b-que him first. I got dibs on the drumstick.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-04-28 19:24  

#4  Diesel is 4.60 in the Bay Area.
Posted by: Penguin   2008-04-28 19:21  

#3  ALso from KOMMERSANT > EMERGING ECONOMIES CALL FOR OVER US$4.0 BILLION INVESTMENTS. GOLDMAN-SACHS > says will need US$4.35 Bilyuhn over TEN YEARS [2008-2018], wid RUSSIA per se anticipated to be the PER-CAPITA GLOBAL LEADING ENERGY PRODUCER-INNOVATOR???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-04-28 19:21  

#2  His reasoning: a combination of shrinking supply and increasing demand, especially from China, India, and America.

At $100 a barrel, it wouldn't surprise me if demand for oil started to decrease in all three countries. Even as new supply started to come online.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2008-04-28 19:19  

#1  Its $4.19 here in Guam.

KOMMERSANT >< WHOSE OIL IS THE BENCHMARK? As "sweet crude" continues to decline, demand for "sour crude"[already 80% of world output/produc] will increase. READ > SOUR CRUDE FROM RUSSIA, VENEZUELA, OTHER OPPONENTS OF THE USA = US POLICIES. ARTICLE - WHY SHOULD MINORITY "SWEET CRUDE" [Read - US-Saud-Allies]BE THE BASE FOR WORLD PRICES VV MAJORITY-AND-HIGHER "SOUR CRUDE"???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-04-28 19:14  

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