Kuwait Times

California petrol demand slowed over the summer

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LONDON: California motorists drive almost 1 billion miles every day, and in doing so consume around 40 million gallons of gasoline and 8 million gallons of diesel. California­ns use their cars a bit less than the average US resident but the state’s population is so large it is one of the largest driving markets in the world. State motorists account for 11 percent of all miles driven in the United States and consume more motor fuel than any individual country except China and Japan.

State data on traffic and fuel sales are therefore often used as a proxy for national trends, but California’s gasoline consumptio­n reflects a mix of local and national factors that are not always easy to separate. Like other parts of the United States, California has seen a surge in car and truck use over the last two years as a result of strong economic growth, job creation and a big drop in fuel prices. But in recent months, growth in both driving and fuel sales has slowed, pointing to more moderate increases in gasoline and diesel demand.

Growth in both traffic volumes and fuel sales has been below the national average since the end of the first quarter. Traffic on state highways rose 3.2 percent in the year to June compared with 2014, but was up just 2.0 percent in August and 1.9 percent in September, according to the state department of transporta­tion. Gasoline sales rose 3.5 percent year-onyear in the first three months of 2015 but growth slowed to just 2.6 percent between April and June, according to state tax records. In July, at the heart of the summer driving season, and the latest month for which tax records are available, gasoline sales were just 2.2 percent higher than the same month in 2014.

Refinery problems

Some of the weakness during the second and third quarters was probably due to local refinery problems that began in February, leaving the state short of fuel through the summer, and sent prices soaring. California motorists generally pay more for gasoline than those in other parts of the country because of the state’s isolation from refineries in the Midwest and Gulf Coast and stricter fuel quality standards to cut smog. California also levies a higher rate of fuel tax than other states except Pennsylvan­ia, Washington, New York and Hawaii.

Between 2005 and 2014, the state’s motorists typically paid about 30 cents per gallon more for gasoline than the nationwide average. But thanks to refinery problems, state prices surged and averaged almost 90 cents per gallon more than the country as a whole between March and August. While motorists in the rest of the country enjoyed the cheapest summer gasoline prices since 2010, prices paid by drivers in California were little changed from the high levels in 20112014.

Relatively high prices of gasoline in California seem to have damped consumptio­n growth over the summer even as low prices elsewhere caused demand to boom. Following the end of the driving season, gasoline supplies in California and the rest of the West Coast have returned to more normal levels. Prices have remained somewhat elevated at around 55 cents per gallon higher than the rest of the country, probably reflecting lack of spare capacity to cope with more outages and the next summer peak. But they are now well below the long-term average and the level prevailing before oil prices tumbled in 2014, which should give a renewed boost to driving and gasoline consumptio­n in the state.

Demand outlook 2016

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