WASHINGTON, Nov. 3 (UPI) — The average retail price for gasoline in the United States was again skewed higher by refinery issues in the Midwest, motor club AAA said.
AAA reports a national average retail price for a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline at $2.19 for Tuesday, a slight increase from the previous day. The rise marks the end of nearly three consecutive weeks of declining gas prices.
Prices in the Midwest were elevated in September because of a refinery issue in Toledo, Ohio. In August, an outage at a BP refinery in Whiting, Ind., one of the nation’s largest, pushed some retail prices above the $3 per gallon mark.
Again, the motor club said in its weekly retail market report the Midwest region has experienced “heavy” refinery maintenance because of higher production during the summer’s peak driving season.
“Although some of the planned work is beginning to conclude, unplanned outages have further reduced supply and kept prices volatile in the region,” AAA’s report read.
A refinery in Joliet, Ill., operated by Exxon Mobil is the latest to report an unscheduled maintenance issue. Refinery issues in the region meant four states in the Midwest moved against the national tide with increases in gasoline prices, with Indiana and Ohio reporting prices at least 8 percent higher than last week at some service stations.
“Although refinery production rates are expected to return to normal in the next two months, unplanned outages could keep pump prices volatile in the region leading into the winter months, and possibly put a bit of upward pressure on the national average in the near term,” AAA’s report said.
Nine states were reporting an average price for gasoline below $2 per gallon. South Carolina had the lowest state average in the nation at $1.88 per gallon.
Recent reports from AAA said the average price for a gallon of gas should be at or below the $2 mark across the country by the end of the year. The national average price is at its lowest for this date in 11 years.
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