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Frequently Asked Questions – Prices
Questions About Prices...
What's up, and down, with gasoline prices lately?
How do I calculate/find diesel fuel surcharges?
How much can I expect to pay for heating this winter?
Why don’t fuel prices change as quickly as crude oil prices?
How do I compare heating fuels?
What are projected diesel prices through 2008?
Why are diesel fuel prices higher than gasoline prices?
How much tax do we pay on a gallon of gasoline?
What are the differences between various types of crude oil prices?
Where can I find inflation-adjusted gasoline prices?
Are the prices that EIA publishes adjusted for inflation?
Where can I get help paying my utility bills?
Who do I contact to complain about high energy prices?
What are the different types of coal prices?
 
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Question: What’s up, and down, with gasoline prices lately?

EIA analysis of the petroleum market points to the cost of crude oil as the main contributor to the large run up and subsequent decline in retail gasoline prices in 2008.

High worldwide oil demand relative to supply, political events and conflicts in some major oil producing regions, and other factors pushed the cost of crude oil for U.S. refiners to a record high in early summer 2008. EIA believes that the resulting high prices for gasoline and other petroleum products and relatively weak economic conditions in the U.S. and other countries have helped to reduce demand and led to the general decline in prices for crude oil and gasoline starting in mid-summer.

Some areas of the country experienced a spike in gasoline prices in August and September due to the impacts of Hurricanes Gustav and Ivan on Gulf Coast refineries and a major gasoline pipeline supplying the Eastern US.

This Week In Petroleum often discusses gasoline prices.

For EIA's latest gasoline price forecast, see EIA's Short-Term Energy Outlook

Last updated: October 30, 2008
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Question: How do I calculate/find diesel fuel surcharges?

The Energy Information Administration does not calculate, assess, or regulate diesel fuel surcharges.

EIA cannot tell you how to calculate a fuel surcharge. Fuel surcharges are negotiated privately by the shipper and the trucking company.
Every company has its own method for calculating surcharges. Many major carriers have information on how they calculate their surcharges on their web sites. EIA cannot and does not endorse a particular method, but you can perform an Internet search for “fuel surcharge trucking” for more information.
EIA collects and disseminates weekly retail diesel fuel price data. Many shippers and truckers use that weekly retail price information in their fuel pricing formulas.

EIA's Weekly Retail On-Highway Diesel Prices (Monday’s prices as of 8:00 A.M Eastern)
Last reviewed: April 17, 2008
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Question: How much can I expect to pay for heating this winter?

U.S. households are projected to spend an average of $971 per household, for heating this winter, a decrease of about 2% over last winter. Households using heating oil and propane are projected to spend less for heating than last winter.

Forecasts (as of December 9, 2008) for average winter heating expenditures and the percent change over last winter, for households heating with:

      • Natural gas – $860 per household, 0.2% increase
      • Heating oil – $1,570 per household, 19.6% decrease
      • Propane – $1,472 per household, 12.4% decrease
      • Electricity – $929 per household, 7.9% increase

Projected heating costs this winter–residential heating fuel prices by region (PDF)

How do I compare heating fuels?

Last updated: December 9, 2008

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Question:Why don’t fuel prices change as quickly as crude oil prices?

The cost of crude oil is a major component in the price of diesel fuel, gasoline, and heating oil. But there are other factors that affect retail fuel prices. Prices are determined by demand and supply in our market economy.  Fuel demand is affected mainly by economic conditions, and for heating oil, the weather.  Supplies come from refinery production, imports, and stocks (inventories.)

Suppliers price their products based on actual and expected demand relative to available and expected supplies over the short and longer term.  Since stocks are the main buffer between short term demand and supply, stock levels are a major factor in fuel pricing.

Reductions in fuel supply, especially when demand is high, can cause prices to increase and to remain high even if crude oil prices drop.  On the other hand, even if crude oil prices are increasing, retail fuel prices may not increase as much, or may even fall, if existing and expected fuel supplies are high relative to demand.  The rise and fall of crude oil and gasoline prices over the past year help to illustrate these points:

    • Retail gasoline prices increased an average of 82 cents per gallon more in the first 7 months of 2008 than in the same period in 2007, while crude oil prices increased by 119 cents per gallon.  Adequate supplies and slowing demand for gasoline meant that much of the crude oil price increases were not passed on at the pump.
    • High prices caused people to buy less gasoline, and gasoline and crude oil prices began falling in mid-July.
    • In September, Hurricanes Ike and Gustav caused several Gulf Coast refineries and a major gasoline pipeline supplying the Eastern U.S. to shut down. These significant supply disruptions drove gasoline prices up in many areas of the country for several weeks, even as world crude oil prices were dropping. 
    • As of mid-October, the supply situation improved and gasoline prices began falling along with oil prices.

EIA offers brochures on gasoline, diesel fuel, and heating oil prices and a detailed primer on oil markets and prices.

Last updated: November 7, 2008

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Question: Are the prices that EIA publishes adjusted for inflation?

Unless stated otherwise, the EIA publishes prices that are not adjusted for inflation. Prices that have been adjusted for inflation are identified as “real” prices.

Learn More: Definition of “real price” (adjusted for inflation) and “nominal price” (not adjusted for inflation).
Last reviewed: June 12, 2008
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Question: Who do I contact to complain about high energy prices?

The Energy Information Administration (EIA) is not the appropriate point of contact for expressing your concerns or opinions on Government policy.  EIA is a policy-neutral statistical and analytical agency within the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).  Read more about EIA.

You can direct your questions and concerns to your elected State and Federal congressional representatives.  Contact my elected officials.

Besides your elected representatives at the State and Federal level, the Department of Energy (DOE) is the lead Executive Branch Agency on energy policy matters. The DOE Policy Office is pleased to respond to letters from the public on behalf of Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman. To communicate your concerns related to energy policy, write to:

Secretary Samuel Bodman
c/o The Policy Office
U.S. Department of Energy
1000 Independence Ave., S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20585

Unfortunately, staff limitations make it impossible for the DOE Policy Office to respond to email policy inquiries at this time.

Contact my elected officials through USA.gov.

Last reviewed: June 25, 2008
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People Are Asking...
How much can I expect to pay for heating this winter?
Why don't fuel prices change as quickly as crude oil prices?
How do I compare heating fuels?
How do I calculate/find diesel fuel surcharges?
What’s up, and down, with gasoline prices lately?
   
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