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This Week In Petroleum EIA Home > Petroleum > This Week In Petroleum |
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Released on March 2, 2005 Walking Manny to Pitch to Ortiz Nationally, the gap between diesel and gasoline prices has been wider this winter than in previous years. The diesel premium has averaged 14.3 cents since the beginning of October through the present, and this current week’s difference is 19.0 cents per gallon. This unusually large difference in prices was first discussed in the November 3, 2004 edition of This Week In Petroleum . As explained in that issue, heating oil and diesel fuel are closely related products, with the main difference being that diesel fuel has lower sulfur content than heating oil. As a result, diesel and heating oil are produced together, and seasonal increases in heating oil demand can put pressure on the diesel fuel market as well. However, the average premium of diesel over gasoline retail prices this past October through the end of February dwarfs that of the previous ten years EIA has been collecting data. This can be largely attributed to high gasoline inventories and low distillate inventories this winter. While higher crude oil prices have pushed up retail prices in both the gasoline and distillate markets, lower product inventories for distillate fuels (diesel and heating oil) have put further upward pressure on those markets as robust gasoline inventories have eased retail gasoline prices, at least compared to diesel prices. While gasoline inventories have been higher than the average stock range, distillate inventories have just been skirting along the lower edge of the normal range. Another key difference this year is increased global diesel demand, especially increased Chinese demand, which has sharply tightened the worldwide distillate fuel balance, thereby stoking competition, at the margin, between the Atlantic Basin and China for incremental barrels. Also, through part of January, U.S. distillate demand was showing a much larger percentage increase from last year than gasoline.
Although it is difficult to say when gasoline retail prices will overtake diesel prices this spring, history and current market conditions suggest that this will happen sometime in the beginning of April. The Short-Term Energy Outlook forecast has April retail diesel at 199.9 cents per gallon and retail regular gasoline at 202.1 cents per gallon. The typical seasonal demand pattern calls for decreasing distillate demand as the weather warms and rising gasoline demand as people increase their travel, leading up to the unofficial beginning of the summer driving season on Memorial Day weekend. While there may be some relief ahead for diesel consumers, steady high crude oil prices promise to keep a floor under all petroleum product prices in coming months. U.S. Average Retail Diesel Price Increases 10 Cents Retail diesel fuel prices gained 9.8 cents last week to 211.8 cents per gallon. Prices were up throughout the country, with the Midwest seeing the largest regional increase of 11.1 cents to 206.4 cents per gallon. California prices increased by 11.7 cents to 237.6 cents per gallon, which is 43.7 cents higher than this time last year. Prices on the West Coast gained 9.1 cents to 241.2 cents per gallon. East Coast prices rose 9.0 cents to reach 211.7 cents per gallon. Residential Heating Oil Prices Increase While Propane Prices Sit Still The average residential propane price remained flat at 171.7 cents per gallon. This was an increase of 18.7 cents over the 153.0 cents per gallon average for this same time last year. Wholesale propane prices increased 2.5 cents per gallon, from 82.8 cents to 85.3 cents per gallon, a gain of 10.4 cents compared to the same period last year. Above Average Draw on Propane During February Text from the previous editions of “This Week In Petroleum” is now accessible through a link at the top right-hand corner of this page. |
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