Diesel Prices Weather Storms
Snowstorms in the Midwest and Northeast brought historic low temperatures in some places and forced oil prices higher. But the weather, albeit chillier than last year, hasn’t been below freezing long enough to make much difference, and there is still too much crude oil, natural gas and heating oil to allow prices to climb.
“In terms of world oil prices, we have been at the lowest levels, if you adjust for inflation, since the Great Depression,” said Ron Planting, an analyst with the American Petroleum Institute.
This is good news to trucking, which is seeing record low diesel prices. The national average diesel price crept up .3 cents last week to 97 cents a gallon, according to the Energy Information Administration. That figure is still 14 cents below its year-ago level.
Other factors are likely to encourage the ongoing oversupply of crude oil. The International Energy Agency, which monitors world oil supply and demand, reduced its forecast for global oil demand in 1999. In its Monthly Oil Market Report for January, the Paris-based IEA predicted world demand for oil would grow only 1.1 million barrels daily, or 1.5%. The group had estimated a 2% increase in demand for this year.
For the full story, see the Jan. 25 print edition of Transport Topics. Subscribe today.