Mon, May 28, 2012, 4:14 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Oil prices rising to near 2011 highs

Tensions over Iran push oil prices up near 2011 highs; gasoline hits $3.65 a gallon

NEW YORK (AP) -- Oil prices are approaching last year's highs as tensions increase over Iran's nuclear program. The rise pushed gasoline prices on Friday to a national average of $3.65 per gallon, the highest ever for this time of year.

Western nations fear Iran is building a nuclear weapon and have been trying to force it to open its facilities to inspection. Iran has refused, turning away international inspectors this week for the second time this month. The United Nations said Friday that Iran has responded to the recent scrutiny by speeding up production of higher-grade enriched uranium, feeding concerns that it is developing a bomb.

As both sides dig in for a protracted standoff, investors are snapping up oil contracts in case fighting breaks out in the heart of the one of the world's biggest oil-producing regions. "Everyone's pricing in the potential for war now," independent analyst Stephen Schork said. "Without a concrete resolution, nobody knows how high this can go."

Israel hasn't ruled out an attack on Iran, and Iran has said it is ready to strike pre-emptively, possibly targeting the Strait of Hormuz, if it is threatened. The Persian Gulf passageway is a potential choke point for oil supplies. One-fifth of the world's oil tankers pass through it every day.

On Friday benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude rose by $1.94 to end the week at $109.77 per barrel in New York. Brent crude rose by $1.85 to finish at $125.47 per barrel in London.

WTI peaked near $114 a barrel last May, while Brent rose above $126 per barrel.

The price of gasoline, which is made from crude oil, has soared with oil prices. The national average jumped by nearly 12 cents per gallon in a week, with state averages above $4 per gallon in California, Alaska and Hawaii.

It looks like they'll keep climbing.

Tom Kloza, publisher and chief oil analyst at Oil Price Information Service, said pump prices will add at least another 10 to 15 cents per gallon in coming days to reflect a recent jump in wholesale markets.

At $3.65 per gallon, gasoline is still below last year's high of $3.98 and the record $4.11 set in 2008. Kloza says pump prices are on pace to top both of those in coming months. He thinks gasoline will climb as high as $4.25 per gallon by late April.

The rise will weigh on the economy, pushing leisure and business travel costs higher. Every one-cent increase in the price of gasoline costs the economy $1.4 billon, analysts say.

Prices have been surging particularly on the West Coast where a BP refinery was shut down after a fire. That refinery in Blaine, Wash., is the third-largest on the West Coast with a production capacity of 230,000 barrels per day.

The closure comes at a tough time for the refining industry. Most refiners are already slowing production to get ready for a switch over from winter to more expensive summer fuel blends. The seasonal switch usually creates a temporary dip in supplies that pushes prices higher at this time of year. The loss of the BP refinery could make that dip even deeper.

Gasoline has become a major political issue this year as prices tick higher.

Some lawmakers have called on the Obama administration to release more oil from emergency stockpiles in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, but analysts say that would be ineffective. The government tried that last summer after the Libyan uprising shut down that country's oil fields. Prices dipped slightly but eventually rebounded.

Independent oil analyst Andrew Lipow pointed out that the U.S. has adequate oil supplies right now, and a release of reserves wouldn't make much sense. Traders are mostly concerned with how the Iran situation will affect supplies this summer. Nobody's sure what will happen, Lipow said, and that is pushing investors to buy more oil as an insurance policy against a major conflict.

"It's just unclear how this plays out," Lipow said. "The worry is that Iran will be forced into a position that they try to impact their neighbors in some way" and curtail oil production in the entire region.

In other energy trading, heating oil rose by 2 cents to finish at $3.32 per gallon, while gasoline futures rose by 4 cents to end at $3.15 per gallon. Natural gas prices fell by 7 cents to finish the week at $2.55 per 1,000 cubic feet.

___

Follow Chris Kahn on Twitter at http://twitter.com/ChrisKahnAP

 
  • Just-Fed-Up  •  2 months ago
    Obama said during his campaign that he wanted gas prices like Europe, $8.00 at the time, but you idiots voted for him anyway.
  • Cloud Runner  •  Colorado Springs, Colorado  •  3 months ago
    So please explain again why the Canadian pipeline was not approved ?
  • JG  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Get ready for another massive round of layoffs
  • westerner  •  3 months ago
    Oil was $98 before all the fears of Iran closing the strait and are now almost $12 higher. Even if we cut off all Iranian oil, would it be worth $12 on the world market?
    • Kenzie 3 months ago
      NO THIS HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH IRAN!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    • Chii 3 months ago
      and the cost of gasoline is near the same prices when oil was $145 per barrel.
    • bill 3 months ago
      Memorial 3 Day Weekend National Gasoline and Diesel Boycott May 26,27 and 28th is every Americans chance to help save our economy ,jobs and future. Don,t buy it or use it all 3 days.
  • BWINKLEJMOOSE  •  3 months ago
    OK, I'm not big on name calling - always considered it a bit cowardly to hurl names over the internet, but if the President releases oil from the SPR in the belief that it will have much of any effect on anything (other than a few refiners and traders that will get cheap oil to play with for a week or two), he is either stupid beyond the pale, or one corrupt pol trying desperately to buy votes by creating the illusion that he is doing something. The SPR has about a 7 week supply of oil in it. Start drawing it down for purely propaganda purposes and you will leave us without an emergency stock pile for real emergencies. Um, say Iran sinks a few tankers in the straights of Hormuz or the Israeili's go postal on Iran. Any of you Hope and Change types want to weigh in? Good Plan? Bad Plan?
  • Thomas K  •  3 months ago
    If Bush was president today Obama and the liberal idiots here would be blaming him for gasoline prices just like they did 6 years ago.
  • August Belflower  •  3 months ago
    " One-fifth of the world's oil tankers pass through it every day " Looks we will see some fight for oil after all. Its always about Oil ..
    • Ray D. Tutto 3 months ago
      And how many of those tankers are heading to the USA? How convenient it is that nobody bothers to mention that. This unrest in Iran has ZERO impact on the USA. This is just another false excuse by the oil companies to gouge us even more and make even greater profits so they can afford to buy even more congressmen.
  • Al  •  Hailey, Idaho  •  3 months ago
    Huh, when oil dropped like $30 a barrel it tooks months to go down. Someone farts, and the next hour you'll already see an increase...#$%$??? Should work both ways. Karma biatches, Karma!!!!!
  • Daemonicus  •  3 months ago
    Who is looking forward to the recession?
    • ripsaw 3 months ago
      Bring it on! Been ready for yrs.
    • Daemonicus 3 months ago
      It has been around 3 years since the last recession so they say, we are due for another dip.
    • Chris 3 months ago
      Our president is very much. It will help him to get over the 50% of the population on government support and thus he will achieve complete Chavez style power.
  • Jimicon  •  3 months ago
    Lies Lies and #$%$ lies. We have plenty an. d no where in the world is without.. Gas is up due to refineries unable to operate at profit. Start using more and they'll bring capacity online, Refineries cost big bucks.
    • Devin 3 months ago
      Uh, the US isn't using any more gasoline than 7-10 years ago. Demand is down and cars are more efficient. That is a good thing.
  • Fritz the cat  •  3 months ago
    If Obama was a Republican the democrats and media would be blaming him.
  • Tagman  •  Columbus, Indiana  •  3 months ago
    Great...the oil companys can have a 40 billion dollar quarter......who cares if I can't afford to get to work or have money for food.
  • Norm Marek  •  Saginaw, Michigan  •  3 months ago
    High gas is going to cripple the economy, and put us back into a recession. I can't wait, I love how everything is so much more affordable when the stock market crashes and takes everything down with it.....:)
  • Joseph  •  Adrian, Michigan  •  3 months ago
    A year ago prices spiked due to worries about the Libya situation. That was settled but prices never really recovered. Oil futures are traded in U.S. dollars and the value of the dollar keeps declining due to failed economic policies, so up go prices. It takes 3 times as long to get a drilling permit under this administration, big pipeline propsal gets vetoed. Yet Obama says "not my fault about prices, I can't do anything..."
  • Mark  •  3 months ago
    Hey Yahoo censorship? 2011 highs? Who was the president? Obama once again.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  McClellan, California  •  3 months ago
    If Bush was President the headline would be "President's inability to allow new drilling in US causes gas prices to spike"...but because obama is in office the wonderfully impartial AP(LMFAO) doesn't say squat, just like the majority of the socialist press. Gas will be at least $5 a gallon come the end of summer and it will be BYE BYE to the failed experiment of a president who got there on false hope, fake dreams and blatant lies..I can't wait until November, it's going to be awesome to see it all unravel around him....
  • Sidney  •  Sacramento, California  •  3 months ago
    Speculators, tension in the middle east, exploding demand from countries like China and India, refineries down for maintenance, too many blends, exporting our own oil, not building the pipeline, not drilling for our own oil, greed, politics.... Did I leave anything out?
  • August Belflower  •  3 months ago
    I just put some gas in my car $12 and it was $4.29 a gallon. Now I am looking forward to vote November elections...
  • awojoone  •  3 months ago
    STOP the exporting of gas and diesel !!!! 1.6 million TO 1.8 MILLION barrels A DAY!!! The Alaska pipeline's oil is going to effing china after we refine it !!! Frack that !!! The U.S. refines oil WHY?? The other countries don't want UNrefined oil, they have NO refineries SCREW THAT!! Our refined oil (gas and diesel) makes more PROFIT for the oil companies shipped overseas than being sold in the U.S. !! KEEP our refined product in the U.S.A. NOT overseas!!!! This is ridiculous!!! Selling our gas and diesel overseas for MORE PROFIT SCREW THAT !!!
  • Brian  •  Amesbury, Massachusetts  •  3 months ago
    Here are some FACTS:
    1. The US has MORE hydrocarbon reserves than any country in the world. Read that again. Because it's true. And drilling technology is accelerating our ability to harvest those reserves.
    2. The US ranks 1st in the world in production of electricity from nuclear reactors (ahead of France); 2nd in the world in coal production(behind China); 2nd in the world in natural gas production(behind Russia); 3rd in the world in oil production(behind Saudi Arabia and Russia); and finally 4th in the world in hydro production(behind China, Canada & Brazil).
    3. The US is the worlds leading producer of high quality energy. In fact the US produces roughly 75% of the primary energy it consumes.

    Given the enormous energy production and reserves in this country, why are so many Americans willing to believe that we should trade 'reliable' resources like nuclear, oil, gas and coal which have UNEQUALLED, on demand energy density..... For unreliable, low power density sources like wind and solar?

    The answer s that too many of us are willing to believe the hype. We aren't willing to investigate the claims or the hard numbers that would prevent us from pouring wasted millions into energy pursuits that are destined to fail. Or perhaps it's the self satisfaction some get from aligning themselves with such grand ideals as 'clean, green, and renewable.'
    The problem, as always, is that when the numbers don't work, when the so called 'green' is more expensive and less reliable than that 'dirty' hydrocarbon we've been using, no one wants to own up to it. Solyndra ring a bell with anyone?
 
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