Average Gas Price Soon Under $2, Lowest Since Recession

Gasoline is close to breaking below a key psychological barrier as drivers enjoy some of the cheapest pump prices since the recession.
Average Gas Price Soon Under $2, Lowest Since Recession
FILE - In this May 8, 2015 file photo, gas station attendant Carlos Macar pumps gas in Andover, Mass. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola, File)
The Associated Press
12/13/2015
Updated:
12/13/2015

DALLAS — Gasoline is close to breaking below a key psychological barrier as drivers enjoy some of the cheapest pump prices since the recession.

The nationwide average price of a gallon of regular Saturday was $2.02, down 58 cents from this time last year, according to auto club AAA. Experts say it could drop below $2 a gallon in the coming days.

For consumers, this winter is shaping up to be a good one, energy-wise. Forecasters predict warmer weather than normal, and fuel prices are low.

The retail price of heating oil for December through February is expected to average $2.40 a gallon, down 18 percent compared with last year, according to the Energy Department. The price of natural gas for residential customers is expected to average $8.72 per 1,000 cubic feet, down 9 percent.

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“I do think it will be much higher in the spring,” he said, predicting they could rise to $2.75 a gallon.

Refiners often curtail production to perform maintenance on their plants during the slower late-winter and early-spring periods, and that is followed by the annual summer surge in driving. That yearly decrease in supplies and uptick in demand usually pushes prices up as the beginning of summer approaches.

The price of unleaded regular gas is $1.979 at a gas station in Newark, Del., Friday, Nov. 27, 2015. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)
The price of unleaded regular gas is $1.979 at a gas station in Newark, Del., Friday, Nov. 27, 2015. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

While gas is at its cheapest price in more than six years, some suggest it should be even cheaper.

Jodie Gunzberg, the head of commodities research at S&P Dow Jones Indices, studied monthly prices for crude oil and gasoline going back to 1988. She found that the two generally went up or down about the same. But so far this year, she said, oil prices are down 29 percent while gasoline is down only 16 percent.

If gasoline prices had behaved exactly the same as oil prices this year, she estimates that consumers would be saving another 6 percent at the pump — about 12 cents on every gallon.

Consumers might not complain too loudly, however. Filling up a 20 gallon tank will cost an average of $40.40 this weekend compared with $52 a year ago. And the Energy Department said this week that the average household can expect to spend $570 less for heating oil this winter, while a natural gas user should save 13 percent.