USA TODAY US Edition

Gas price jump expected in 2017

Average cost of $2.49 per gallon predicted, highest since 2012

- Charisse Jones @charissejo­nes USA TODAY

The new year is expected to bring the highest gas prices since 2012 and lead to U.S. drivers shelling out $52 billion more at the pump than they did in 2016, according to price watcher GasBuddy.

The average cost for regular, unleaded gasoline is expected to jump to $2.49 per gallon this year, up from $2.13 in 2016. That significan­t uptick is in marked contrast to the steady price drops consumers had likely grown used to in the previous four years.

“The era of falling prices from year to year is likely to be over,’’ says Patrick DeHaan, GasBuddy’s senior petroleum analyst.

Instead, U.S. drivers are pro-

jected to spend $354.6 billion on gas this year, a jump from the $302.5 billion doled out in 2016. While a potentiall­y stronger jobs picture may make a steeper gas tab a bit less painful to individual consumers, it could take a toll on the overall economy.

“This is removing $52 billion in one year’s time from motorists’ wallets,’’ says DeHaan. “Some motorists have been saving and putting into the bank whatever they’re not spending on fuel. And ... it may be an expense that creeps up on them and causes them to cut back in other areas.’’

The key reason for the price increases is the November decision by the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to pare back oil production, and the group’s subsequent success in persuading Russia and several other major oil producers to do the same.

Just two years ago, gas prices plunged after OPEC’s announceme­nt that it would produce as much crude oil as it could. “The attitude change in 2014 opened the door to cheap gas,’’ DeHaan said, and “the meeting this past November is shutting the door.”

A cross country drive may be most expensive in May, with the average gas price projected to peak at $2.67 a gallon nationally, while February is expected to feature an average price of $2.32 per gallon, the lowest of the year.

Those are the traditiona­l months when drivers see highs and lows at the pump, with refineries often offering discounts to gas stations in February to drain their remaining winter gasoline supplies, while prices surge in the spring when refineries do maintenanc­e and switch over to summer gas formulas that can be more expensive.

Summer gasoline is also a primary reason why motorists in some major cities may see particular­ly steep price increases. For instance, Los Angeles, Chicago and New York each has a different formula, a “prime example of the logistical challenges that add to the prices we pay every spring,’’ says DeHaan.

Still, higher oil prices may get dormant oil drillers back to work “and that would create a ceiling to how high oil prices can go,” DeHaan says.

“The era of falling prices from year to year is likely to be over.’’ Patrick DeHaan, GasBuddy analyst

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