WSPA realizes that
consumers have asked a lot of tough questions lately
about gasoline prices. We welcome those questions and
offer the following information to help foster a healthy
public dialogue on these issues.
Why
are California gasoline prices generally higher than
in other states?
For one thing, gasoline taxes are higher here than
in almost any other state. Further, according to
EIA testimony before Congress, demand for gasoline
here has grown at roughly 2 to 4 times production
capacity growth. Finally, California’s unique, more
stringent cleaner-burning gasoline requirements (which
result in California gasoline being the cleanest gasoline
in the world) make it more expensive to produce.
Why
do we sometimes see wide price variations within California?
Government agencies such as the California Energy
Commission and other petroleum experts report that,
due to differing supply/demand and other local market
factors, gasoline prices are likely to vary from region
to region throughout the state under all types of
market conditions.
How
do gasoline prices compare to the costs of other products?
According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, which
reports the Consumer Price Index (CPI), gasoline prices
have risen far less than many other products we use
every day, including electricity, food, housing and
medical care.
Are
refiners making disproportionate profits on these
high gas prices?
No. Business Week reported, for the first
nine months of 2003, profit margins for oil and natural
gas companies were about the same as U.S. industry
as a whole. (6.2% for oil versus 6.4% for the average
of all U.S.
industries)
Over a five-year period for the petroleum companies
reporting, profit margins were about 4.7%, which is
slightly below the 5.2% average for all U.S.
companies during the same period, again according
to Business Week.
What’s
being done to protect consumers?
Recently, the FTC stepped up its market oversight
activities by initiating daily gasoline price monitoring
to guard against pricing irregularities. And the EIA
has a toll-free hotline for consumers to report suspected
gasoline price gouging, at (800) 244-3301.
Western States Petroleum
Association
1415 L Street #600, Sacramento, CA 95814
2/18/04