http://www.wsj.com/articles/sky-high-california-gas-prices-have-a-green-additive-1437174504
Mandate a California specific niche gas formula that few refineries produce, shut down some area lower cost nuclear power plants that generate electricity which places greater demand on refineries to supply fuel for electric power, drought decreases electric production from hydro, & state enacts cap & trade that forces a number of smaller refineries to close.
Yep, obviously a huge oil company conspiracy. No other posible reason.....
Yup, and those things help explain why the average price in California is significantly higher than the average price in Paducah. But they don't explain the overnight $.50 and up increases that occur not only in California, but also here in the Chicago metro area and many other places. And btw, we also have reformulated "clean burning" fuel mandated here, as do many parts of the country that have air pollution issues, and our gas prices are currently in the $2.59 - $2.89 range.
In this area we also get hit with overnight $.50 increases at the pump, for no discernible reasons. A common occurrence here is to get hit with a big increase when the refineries make their annual shift to summer blends from winter blends, as if that required rebuilding the refinery or something, and then again when they shift back to winter blends, and then again whenever something happens globally that makes it easy for the futures speculators to bid the price of crude up. It doesn't matter that your local refineries aren't paying that inflated futures price, and probably never will, but it's instant justification for a huge hike the very next business day on the fuel that's already sitting in storage. Then when the latest scare tactic turns out to be another BS deal, and the storage facilities are filled to overflowing with fuel no one is buying, the pump prices finally start dropping by a penny today, maybe two pennies in another couple days, etc.. In one or two months we might make it back to where the prices were before the bogus increase. Then the local refineries decide they all have to shut down for routine "maintenance" during the same time period, creating an artificial shortage (on paper only, the storage tanks are filled to the brim) that justifies another big pump price bump even though demand is still low and supply of both refined products and crude oil is excessive. Funny how supply and demand never enter the equation except when the results are in favor of the oil industry.
When they do these things repeatedly, it's not hard to understand why many people believe a conspiracy exists, at least on a local or regional basis. It's not the retailers who are driving this, it's the refineries and the distributors who are setting the price. Gas stations around here survive on profits from the attached convenience store, not the fuel.
Jerry