Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Biden to oil industry: Don’t raise gas prices as hurricane arrives

- By Aamer Madhani Associated Press writers Darlene Superville, Josh Boak and Matthew Daly contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Wednesday warned oil and gas companies against increasing prices for consumers as

Hurricane Ian made landfall along Florida’s southwest coast.

“Do not, let me repeat, do not use this as an excuse to raise gasoline prices or gouge the American people,” Mr. Biden said at the start of a conference on hunger in America.

Mr. Biden said the hurricane “provides no excuse for price increases at the pump” and if it happens, he will ask federal officials to determine ”whether price gouging is going on.”

“America is watching. The industry should do the right thing,” the president added.

There are few signs that average gas prices have jumped significan­tly in Florida as the hurricane began to approach. AAA put the statewide average at just under $3.40 a gallon, six-tenths of a cent higher than a week ago.

A 99-day run of falling pump prices nationally ended recently, and the 14week decline was the longest streak since 2015. The nationwide average price had risen past $5 a gallon — and $6 in California — in June as the economic recovery and an increase in travel boosted demand for gasoline and Russia’s war in Ukraine caused a spike in oil prices.

Gasoline prices mostly reflect trends in global oil prices, and crude — both the U.S. benchmark and the internatio­nal Brent — has been slumping since midJune on growing fears of a global recession that would reduce demand for energy.

Many energy analysts believe prices are more likely to rise than fall in the next few months. But changes in sentiment about the economy, Russia’s war, and even hurricane season — always a threat to disrupt refineries along the Gulf Coast — make prediction­s uncertain.

A spokeswoma­n for the American Petroleum Institute, an oil industry group, said the industry is focused on “delivering fuels where they are needed most while ensuring the safety of our workforce’’ during the hurricane.

“Gasoline prices are determined by market forces — not individual companies — and claims that the price at the pump is anything but a function of supply and demand are false,” spokeswoma­n Andrea Woods said.

The hurricane was lashing Florida with heavy rain and pushing a devastatin­g storm surge after strengthen­ing to the threshold of the most dangerous Category 5 status. Ian grew to a catastroph­ic Category 4 hurricane overnight with top winds of 155 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center, but began weakening upon landfall.

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