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Rail News: Rail Industry Trends
3/3/2003
Rail News: Rail Industry Trends
March's fuel-price outlook not very encouraging, OPIS says
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February didn't exactly signal the fuel-price trend U.S. railroads were hoping for. The average nationwide retail per-gallon price for diesel at the beginning of the month was $1.54; at the end, it was $1.80, according to a report by Oil Price Information Service (OPIS).
A year ago, the average U.S. retail per-gallon diesel price was $1.22 — more than 60 cents per gallon less compared with peak prices expected in March, OPIS said.
Last month, wholesale diesel prices rose about 35 cents per gallon because of a late February surge in demand from end-users who typically consume natural gas. Many commercial and industrial users' natural-gas supplies were interrupted, and additional demand strained supplies in northern markets, OPIS said.
Because of global-war worries, a Venezuelan oil-workers strike, the decade's first sustained cold winter and low inventories, end-users can expect to pay 30 cents to 35 cents more per gallon for some oil products in March compared with what they paid a month ago, OPIS said.
A year ago, the average U.S. retail per-gallon diesel price was $1.22 — more than 60 cents per gallon less compared with peak prices expected in March, OPIS said.
Last month, wholesale diesel prices rose about 35 cents per gallon because of a late February surge in demand from end-users who typically consume natural gas. Many commercial and industrial users' natural-gas supplies were interrupted, and additional demand strained supplies in northern markets, OPIS said.
Because of global-war worries, a Venezuelan oil-workers strike, the decade's first sustained cold winter and low inventories, end-users can expect to pay 30 cents to 35 cents more per gallon for some oil products in March compared with what they paid a month ago, OPIS said.