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Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis for the Oil Price Information Service. - HDT/Canva graphic

Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis for the Oil Price Information Service.

HDT/Canva graphic


Diesel and gasoline prices have dropped from record highs, but Tom Kloza of the Oil Price Information Service says you can expect prices to remain volatile. “This is a bit of an interlude in what is going to be a stormy, stormy path the rest of this year and into 2023 as well,” he said in an OPIS webinar on July 12.

He said diesel has been “probably the most challenging environment of all. We saw diesel prices go above $6 in some cases. I would not bet those … are over.”

Inventories of diesel and other distillate stocks are low, Kloza noted, particularly in some areas of the country such as the Northeast.

“Watch diesel prices in the next six months. They could go absolutely parabolic in a replay of what we saw in March and April.”

A look at the news headlines is an indication of just how uncertain the global energy markets are. On the same day, as the New York Times reported that oil prices fell below $100 a barrel on a weaker global economic outlook, Yahoo Finance Live featured an interview with Neal Dingmann, Truist’s managing director of energy research, predicting that a supply shortfall resulting from a ban on Russia’s natural gas could bump crude prices “well over $150” per barrel.

At midday on July 12, the price of West Texas Intermediate crude had dropped 7.8% to $96.01 a barrel. Oil prices rose to more than $120 a barrel last winter after Russia invaded Ukraine.

Diesel, Gasoline Prices Drop

On-highway diesel fuel prices averaged $5.568 nationally as of July 11, according to figures from the Department of Energy, down 10.7 cents from the previous week, although up $2.23 from a year ago.

The highest prices were in California at $6.665, up $2.478 from a year ago but down 11.4 cents from the previous week. The West Coast is the only region reporting prices averaging over $6 per gallon.


Diesel prices have started trending downward, but that may not last. - Source: DOE Energy Information Administration

Diesel prices have started trending downward, but that may not last.

Source: DOE Energy Information Administration


The Energy Information Administration’s short term energy outlook released July 12 reported that U.S. diesel prices averaged $4.91 per gal in the first half of 2022, up from $3.06 in the first half of last year. EIA forecasts diesel prices will average $4.73 per gallon for the year and $4.07 per gallon in 2023.

U.S. regular gasoline retail prices averaged $4.11 per gallon in the first half of 2022, up from $2.78 in the first half of last year. It forecasts gasoline prices will average $4.05 per gallon in 2022 and $3.57 per gal in 2023.

The spot price of Brent crude oil averaged $71 per barrel in 2021, and EIA forecasts an average $104 per barrel in 2022 and $94 in 2023.

But the EIA noted that the outlook is “subject to heightened uncertainty resulting from a variety of factors,” including Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the uncertainty of economic forecasts, how sanctions affect Russia’s oil production, the production decisions of OPEC+, and how fast U.S. production of oil and natural gas ramps up.

Why Are Oil and Fuel Prices So Uncertain?

Kloza outlined “crosswinds galore,” or factors that could cause oil and fuel prices to go up or down. “My leaning right now, in an uncomfortably challenging year, is the items that can create substantial uplift in the price of fuel outnumbers those that can create downdrafts.”

Recession: Kloza said he believes the market has already “baked in” a mild recession. If we don’t have a recession, oil and fuel prices could rise. If we have a worse recession, that will make demand fall and prices will also fall. New COVID-19 variants in China and other countries have led to lockdowns and lower demand.

Strategic Petroleum Reserve: “If not for SPR sales, we would have seen crude oil go to $145, $150,” he said. However, the SPR is at its lowest level since January 1987.

U.S. production: “It’s coming on,” he said, projecting 13.4 to 14 million barrels a day next year in U.S. production. The EIA projects U.S. refineries will average 94% utilization in the third quarter of 2022, as oil companies work to cash in on high wholesale margins. “Although we expect that refinery utilization will be at or near the highest levels in the past five years, operable U.S. refinery capacity has fallen by about 1 million barrels per day,” said the EIA report. “As a result, we do not expect U.S. refinery output of products to reach its highest level in the past five years.”

Hurricane season: A hurricane season better or worse than expected could push fuel prices lower or higher.

Russia: “The biggest wild card,” Kloza said, “is what will a desperate Vladimir Putin do?” So far, sanctions on Russian oil have not proved as successful as the West had hoped. “Russian output has been surprisingly high,” he said, as Russian sends its oil and gas to other countries such as China, India, and even Brazil and other parts of Latin America.

“If we wake up one morning and there’s a regime change in Russia, it will be a major pivoting point for the energy crisis — and this is a crisis, make no mistake.”

What Can the White House Do?

Kloza believes the Biden administration’s proposed fuel tax holiday is dead. “I do think you’ll see some state tax holidays, which could juice up demand,” he said – noting that in his state, Florida, that tax holiday will come in October, just before the election.

EPA waivers are another tool in the White House tool box, which Kloza said we could see, especially in the wake of a hurricane.

Pressure and/or incentives from the government to restart refineries is another option.

“There’s a lot of red tape that could be cut by the Biden Administration,” he said. While we’ve missed the gasoline season, he said, it could be in effect in time to affect distillate production for winter. “Now I’ve heard nothing about that. But it could happen. You also could see some entities to try to keep the refineries in Houston from closing …not so much resurrect the dead refineries but keep refineries that look like they’re going to be needed through 2023.”

Another solution being pushed by the White House is price caps on Russian oil, which Kloza called “a real long shot for the Biden Administration,” pointing out that a lot of Russian energy is just being “shifted from Europe, which is at war with Russia, through proxy, to China, India, and other developing countries.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen was scheduled to discuss implementation of the U.S. price cap proposal with Japan’s Finance Minister during their July 12 meeting. The global price of oil could surge to around $140 per barrel if a proposed price cap on Russian oil is not adopted, along with sanction exemptions that would allow shipments below that price, a senior U.S. Treasury official told Reuters. The goal is to set the price at a level that covers Russia’s marginal cost of production so Moscow is incentivized to continue exporting oil, but not high enough to allow it to fund its war against Ukraine.



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