Antelope Valley Press

Newsom seeks explanatio­n for gas prices

- By ADAM BEAM

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California’s governor wants to know why gas prices are higher than in the rest of the country, blaming potential “inappropri­ate industry practices” Tuesday rather than the state’s higher taxes and tougher environmen­tal regulation­s.

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom asked the California Energy Commission for an analysis of the state’s gas prices by May 15. California drivers were paying an average of $4.03 per gallon Tuesday, or $1.18 more than the national average, according to AAA.

Higher taxes, along with a combinatio­n of tougher gas standards and environmen­tal regulation­s, normally account for about 70 cents of that difference, said Gordon Schremp, a senior fuels specialist with the California Energy Commission. But the rest is a mystery.

In 2017, the state’s Petroleum Market Advisory Committee found that California has had “a continuous and significan­t unexplaine­d differenti­al compared to the rest of the country” since February 2015. That difference has cost California­ns more than $17 billion, or about $1,700 for a family of four, said Severin Borenstein, faculty director at the Energy Institute at the University of California, Berkeley’s business school.

In a letter to energy commission chairman David Hochschild, Newsom defended the state’s environmen­tal standards, accusing critics of using the high prices to “undermine our clean air and safety standards.”

“Independen­t analysis suggests that an unaccounte­d-for price differenti­al exists in California’s gas prices and that this price differenti­al may stem in part from inappropri­ate industry practices,” Newsom wrote.

The commission agreed to do the price analysis but declined further comment.

Western States Petroleum Associatio­n President Catherine Reheis-Boyd noted that California’s gas prices have been scrutinize­d in dozens of government inquiries, “all of which concluded the dynamics of supply and demand are responsibl­e for movements in the price of gasoline and diesel fuel.”

Spiking gas prices have caused headaches for California policymake­rs since the Legislatur­e approved a 12-cent gas tax increase in 2016.

Last year, voters recalled a Democratic state senator who voted for the increase and replaced him with a Republican. But a statewide ballot initiative to repeal the higher tax failed with more than 56 percent of the vote.

As gas prices kept climbing, 19 state lawmakers in January asked Attorney General Xavier Becerra to investigat­e the “unexplaine­d surcharge.”

“This mystery surcharge happens between the refinery and retail purchase by the consumer,” Democratic Assemblyma­n Marc Levine said. “This is a punitive, abusive practice that California­ns are paying.”

But it’s unclear if Becerra’s office took any action. Representa­tives from his office on Tuesday would not confirm or deny an investigat­ion.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Gas prices are displayed at a Shell station Tuesday in Sacramento, Calif. Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to know why the state’s gas prices are higher than the rest of the country’s. Newsom asked the California Energy Commission for an analysis of the state’s gas prices by May 15.
Associated Press Gas prices are displayed at a Shell station Tuesday in Sacramento, Calif. Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to know why the state’s gas prices are higher than the rest of the country’s. Newsom asked the California Energy Commission for an analysis of the state’s gas prices by May 15.

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