The Province

Don’t blame taxes for gas hikes: economist

- PATRICK JOHNSTON pjohnston@postmedia.com twitter.com/risingacti­on

When oil prices crashed at the end of 2014 — from a high of $110 per barrel to roughly half within a few months, and eventually bottoming out at about $35 in early 2016 — a funny thing happened with Vancouver’s gas prices.

They went down a little, but not nearly the same as the bulk base price.

Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es economist Marc Lee has looked at how gas prices have tracked over the past few years and found data that broke down where the increases were coming from.

While the global price of oil fell by 68 per cent, the price of gas in the Lower Mainland fell just 18 per cent.

And now local gas prices are actually higher than they were during their 2014 peak, while the global price of oil remains two-thirds of its 2014 peak. Lee found that the growth in prices was heavily tied to the resurgent price of crude, but also due to increased profits for refineries.

Taxes, which some have said is the big problem, have actually only gone up a comparativ­ely small amount.

“In other words, refiners and retailers stepped in to take greater profits on the down side.

Compare this to the almost instantane­ous increases in price at the pump whenever there is an accident, bad weather or any other excuse that industry could use to justify a price hike,” he wrote for policynote.ca.

“The refining part is what really jumped out at me, I had no idea that that was going on,” he said this week of how oil companies reacted as crude prices were falling.

Gas prices have hovered around $1.50 in the Lower Mainland of late, but you may remember that prices at the beginning of 2016 were about $1.10.

Some of the rise in local price from 2016 is due to a rebound in global crude prices, Lee notes — and there’s really no getting away from the going world price of oil — but a good chunk is due to a rise in “refining margin” — that is, the amount of money the refineries that turn crude into gasoline and other fuels take for profits.

Since the first quarter of 2016, refiners are making 8.5 cents more per litre — and if you go back to what they were taking before oil prices peaked in mid-2014, refiners are taking in more than 20 cents now compared with then.

 ?? FRANCIS GEORGIAN/PNG FILES ?? Local gas prices are now actually higher than they were during the 2014 peak, while the global price of oil remains only two-thirds that of 2014.
FRANCIS GEORGIAN/PNG FILES Local gas prices are now actually higher than they were during the 2014 peak, while the global price of oil remains only two-thirds that of 2014.

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