Gas prices continue to go up in that wake of tensions in the Middle East.
The price of a barrel of crude oil has gone over $100 - that number was a record breaker back in early 2008 - the start of the Great Recession.
From the Associated Press:
Gas prices AAA Michigan says gasoline prices are up 8.4 cents per gallon over the past week to a statewide average of $3.53. The auto club said Monday the statewide average is 80.5 cents per gallon higher than last year at this time. Of the cities it surveys, AAA Michigan says the cheapest price for self-serve regular fuel is in the Saginaw/Bay City area, where it's $3.48 a gallon. The highest average can be found in the Marquette area at $3.59. Dearborn-based AAA Michigan surveys 2,800 Michigan gas stations daily.
The White House chief of staff Bill Daley said on NBC's Meet the Press that opening up the country's strategic oil reserves is an option the Obama Administration is considering:
"It is something that only is done--has been done in very rare occasions. There's a bunch of factors that have to be looked at, and it is just not the price. Again, the uncertainty--I think there's no one who doubts that the uncertainty in the Middle East right now has caused this tremendous increase in the last number of weeks."
Many people wonder why we're seeing an increase in gas prices when the U.S. imports most of it's oil from Canada and Mexico.
Libya doesn't even make the the U.S. Department of Energy's Top 15 list of countries we import oil from.
The answer, simply, is that oil is a global commodity, so when the global price of crude goes up, we all pay more. Crude oil prices influence the price of gas more than other factors like refining, distribution, and taxes.
How Stuff Works has a write up of how the complex system of gas prices are factored here in the U.S.
They break the cost of a dollar of gas down this way:
- Taxes: 15 cents
- Distribution and Marketing: 11 cents
- Refining: 7 cents
- Crude oil: 67 cents
You can check gas prices near you on michigangasprices.com.