ENERGY - Gas costs jump 13c a gallon

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Gas Costs Jump 13 Cents per Gallon

CAMARILLO, Calif. (AP) -- Although oil prices have remained steady, the cost of gas jumped nearly 13 cents per gallon in the past two weeks, according to the Lundberg Survey.

San Francisco had the highest average price at $1.95 and Salt Lake City had the lowest at $1.43.

The average price of gas, including all grades and taxes, was $1.67 on Friday, up 12.69 cents, or 8.4 percent, from April 6, according to the survey of 8,000 stations nationwide.

It was the largest two-week jump in terms of cents per gallon since the survey began a half-century ago, analyst Trilby Lundberg said Sunday. She did not adjust the figures for inflation.

''This is purely a U.S. gasoline market phenomenon, not crude oil, not OPEC,'' Lundberg said. ''Crude oil prices are little changed for weeks now.''

Supplies are tight because environmental protection requirements that kick in for spring and summer are forcing more complicated and expensive refining as gasoline is reformulated to produce less smog.

Price hikes ranged from less than 7 cents per gallon for self-serve regular gas in the West -- which already had the country's highest prices -- to 23 cents in Chicago.

Sam Hussin, manager of a Shell station on Chicago's West Side, said prices also started rising around this time last summer, ''but not like this.''

''Last year two dollars was the max and now it's already over two dollars and the summer just started,'' Hussin said.

No hikes were reported for Honolulu; Anchorage, Alaska; Portland, Ore.; and Seattle, apparently because their supplies were not required to be reformulated. Lundberg said she expected some markets will continue to see price increases. But she doubted that the overall average price will hit $2 per gallon ''in any foreseeable future.''

''The national average price is still a nickel under last June's peak and might never reach it,'' Lundberg said. ''Unless crude oil prices increase significantly or unless an emergency occurs affecting either pipelines or refineries, both gasoline price and supply should soon cease their extreme behavior.''

-- Anonymous, April 23, 2001

Answers

Response to ENERGY - Gas costs jump 18c a gallon

I really wouldn't know anymore. I only have to fill my Insight about once a month, and I can't afford to pass any gas stations the rest of the time because those routes slow me down and kill my mileage quest. (My record so far is 88.1 mpg on the way to work.)

-- Anonymous, April 23, 2001

Did we ever decide how to spell a raspberry?

-- Anonymous, April 23, 2001

On the downside, the tabbies don't like the Insight. They much prefer having the station wagon in the garage for some reason.

-- Anonymous, April 23, 2001

Watching a refinery in Carson (SoCal) burn on TV. Should be worth an extra 25 cents here in a month or so.

-- Anonymous, April 23, 2001

This morning's paper carries a story saying that San Francisco prices are now $2.019 a gallon for regular. Here in Maine the rise does not seem to have slowed -- on the way home last night I noticed that the cheapest gas is now $1.639, up two cents from the weekend, which was up three cents from the Thursday before. Name-brand gas is running $1.659 and up, with the full-service stations now breaking the $1.70 mark. That's new territory for us, and we're just on the edge of the tourist season.

-- Anonymous, April 24, 2001


Cash, we need an ID from you. Please mail it to jas.donald@usa.net.

-- Anonymous, April 24, 2001

Git, I thought we cleared that up??

Milo

-- Anonymous, April 25, 2001


Whups, My bad.

temporally challenged

Milo

-- Anonymous, April 25, 2001


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