Oil nears $110 a barrel, gas prices jump 12 cents a gallon in a week. Eek!

Tensions with Iran have markets 'convinced there will be some type of confrontation,' says an energy analyst. Oil buyers are starting to 'horde,' and nervousness is affecting gas prices.

Gas prices are posted at the Citgo gas station Friday in Philadelphia. The price of gasoline, which is made from crude oil, has soared as oil prices rise. The national average jumped by nearly 12 cents per gallon in a week, with state averages above $4 per gallon in California, Alaska, and Hawaii.

Alex Brandon/AP

February 24, 2012

In bad news for drivers and the US economy, on Friday the price of crude oil and gasoline both moved higher.

By the end of the trading day, crude oil on the New York Mercantile Exchange closed at $109.70 a barrel, up $1.87 for the day and up $6 a barrel for the week. Nationally, gasoline at the pump cost 12 cents a gallon more than it did a week ago, according to AAA.

The major reason is concern that Israel will try to bomb Iran’s uranium-enrichment facilities, oil traders say. If that were to happen, Iran might try to block oil shipments moving through the Strait of Hormuz. Because more than 17 million barrels of oil per day move through the waterway – 20 percent of all oil traded worldwide – any blockade would create oil shortages.

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“The markets are convinced there will be some type of confrontation,” says Chicago-based Phil Flynn, an energy analyst at PFG Best, a broker. “People around the globe are scrambling to get supplies.”

It hasn’t helped that Europe and Russia are experiencing a harsh winter, driving up demand for home heating oil. More Asian nations, moreover, are beginning to reduce their consumption of Iranian crude oil to comply with a Western-led crackdown on firms that buy the oil. According to some press reports, India is reducing its purchases of Iranian crude by 10 percent, while some Chinese buyers are cutting back by 20 percent. Japan has indicated it will try to reduce its purchases by more than 10 percent.

These nations are now trying to round up replacement oil, plus stockpile more in case there is a conflict, says Mr. Flynn. “People are starting to hoard oil supplies to make sure they have supplies for whatever may be coming,” he says. “If we can avoid a confrontation with Iran, the market will collapse.”

The rising price of crude oil is rippling quickly through to the price of gasoline. On Friday, the national average price of a gallon of gasoline surged another 4 cents, to almost $3.65, according to AAA.

Given the price of gasoline on the futures market, pump prices may well rise higher in the weeks ahead. Gasoline futures prices imply $4 a gallon nationally by May, according to Tancred Lidderdale, an energy analyst at the Energy Information Administration. In some parts of the country, especially California, Hawaii, and Alaska, prices are already higher than $4 a gallon.

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A big jump in the California price, which rose 10 cents a gallon between Thursday and Friday, is mainly a market reaction to a fire at a refinery in Washington State. It could take several weeks to repair that refinery, according to industry sources.

The rising price of gasoline is also causing concern among some politicians in Washington. On Friday, House Speaker John Boehner called for President Obama to agree to build the Keystone XL pipeline, which would bring about 700,000 barrels of oil per day from Canada to the Gulf Coast.

“President Obama is out of excuses when it comes to blocking the Keystone pipeline and the thousands of jobs that come with it,” said Mr. Boehner in a statement. 

Three Democratic lawmakers laid blame on speculators, who they said were using Iranian posturing to push gasoline prices higher than ever for this time of year. Reps. Edward Markey of Massachusetts, Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut, and Peter Welch of Vermont sent a letter to President Obama asking him to release oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

“It is essential that the United States have an aggressive strategy for releasing oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to combat the speculators capitalizing on the fear in oil markets and send a message to Iran that we are ready, willing and able to deploy our oil reserves,” they wrote in the letter.

The SPR was last opened in the spring of 2011, after the uprising in Libya cut off some supplies to the world markets. That action reduced gasoline prices by 8 percent, the Democratic lawmakers said.

However, Mr. Flynn says SPR oil should be tapped only for national emergencies, not just because gasoline prices are high.

“What if there really is a war in the Middle East?" says Flynn. “We may really need that oil down the road, so to release it prematurely is dangerous policy.”