Lodi News-Sentinel

Average gas prices in U.S. hit $3 for first time since 2014

- Simone Jasper

The average national gas price on Wednesday hit $3 per gallon for the first time since 2014.

Costs have been on the rise since a cyberattac­k over the weekend forced Colonial Pipeline to temporaril­y shut down operations. The pipeline delivers nearly half of all fuel along the East Coast.

“Areas including Mississipp­i, Tennessee and the east coast from Georgia into Delaware are most likely to experience limited fuel availabili­ty and price increases, as early as this week,” AAA spokespers­on Jeanette McGee said Tuesday in a news release. “These states may see prices increase three to seven cents this week.”

As of Wednesday, Americans were paying just over $3 a gallon on average for regular gas. That’s up from $2.985 the day before and $2.863 the previous month, AAA said.

It’s the first time since October 2014 that the United States’ average topped $3 a gallon, Patrick De Haan, an analyst for GasBuddy, wrote on Twitter.

At this time last year, the national average was $1.854. But oil production cuts and higher demand for gas in a recovering economy have been pushing prices higher in recent months, McClatchy News reported in March.

As news of the cyberattac­k spread, drivers in North Carolina and other states formed lines to reach gas pumps in a “panic-buying” spree. Among major metro areas, 71% of gas stations near Charlotte, 72% of stations near Raleigh and 60% of gas stations near Atlanta were without fuel as of Wednesday morning, according to GasBuddy.

But fuel experts warn against rushing to buy gas. Economists have said there isn’t currently a shortage caused solely by the Colonial Pipeline shutdown, which would have to last multiple days before there’s a major impact, McClatchy News reported.

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