By Michael B. Sauter, Charles B. Stockdale, and Ashley C. Allen, 24/7 Wall St.
A record 50 percent of Americans strongly disapprove of President Barack Obama?s handling of the economy, a recent Washington Post-ABC News survey shows. A whopping 65 percent are unhappy with his handling of gas prices. While national gas prices have increased 8 percent in the past month alone, the increase has not been uniform across all states, with some faring far better than others.
Despite a?national average of about to hit $4.00 per gallon, some states with the lowest prices have actually seen gas prices fall recently. 24/7 Wall St. reviewed average gasoline prices across the 50 states to?identify where it was most inexpensive. Many of the states where gas is cheapest benefit from access to crude oil and refineries and also enjoy a low cost of living.
One of the factors explaining low gas prices in some states is simply geography. The reason gas costs more in the coastal regions compared to the central U.S. is partly due to access to oil fields and refineries. States in the South and the West, excluding the Pacific coast, are either close to oil fields or to pipelines. This proximity keeps the cost of transporting crude to the refineries low compared to states that have to rely on freight. Many of the Southern and Western states also have more refineries than the coastal regions. As a result, the cost to ship gasoline from the refineries to the gas pump is also lower.
The presence of refineries appears to affect gas prices significantly. Eight of the 13 states with the lowest gas prices have at least three refineries. States with relatively high gas prices, including Connecticut and New York, have none.
Because East Coast refineries produce only about 8 percent of total gasoline in the U.S., well below the population?s needs, these states have to import gasoline from the Gulf of Mexico. This keeps prices high. To make matters worse, several major refineries in the northeast have shut down, or are in the process of shutting down, because of the rising costs of shipping crude to these areas.
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Meanwhile, booming oil production and the presence of multiple refineries in Wyoming and Montana has driven prices down substantially. The cost of crude oil in these areas is also cheaper because pipelines do not exist to move it from the fields to refineries outside of the region. Because the market for the crude is limited, the price to refineries is cheap. As a result, prices at the pump are also low.
States with low gas prices tend to have a low cost of living and low median income. Most products and services are inexpensive in the states with the cheapest gas. That is at least in part because the local economies cannot sustain higher prices. Six of the states have among the lowest costs of living, according to the Missouri Economic Research and Information Institute (MERIC), which measures expenses including housing, health care, food costs, as well as gas prices. These states also have relatively low median household incomes, with seven of the 10 having among the lowest median incomes in the country.
Finally, states with the lowest gasoline prices also have low excise taxes on gas. Six of the 10 states featured in this article are among the 15 states with the lowest gas taxes. Wyoming, which has the lowest gas prices in the country, has the second-lowest tax rate.
24/7 Wall St. ranked the 10 states with the lowest gas prices based on data from the American Automobile Association?s Fuel Gauge Report. Median income and population data was taken from the U.S. Census Bureau. The number of refineries by state was taken from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Gas tax rates was taken from the Tax Foundation.
These are the 10 states with the cheapest gas.
1. Wyoming
- Price per gallon, regular:?$3.30
- Cost of living:?24th highest
- Median household income:?$53,512 (16th highest)
- Tax per gallon:?14.0 cents (second lowest)
Five months ago, the price of unleaded gasoline in Wyoming was $3.54, the 15th-highest rate in the country. As of today, the price has actually fallen 24 cents to $3.30, and is now the cheapest in the U.S. The state has a tax rate of just 14 cents per gallon of gas, second only to Alaska, which has the lowest gas tax in the country. The state has the smallest population in the country, but has six separate refineries, which together process more than 160,000 barrels each day. This production keeps prices extremely low in the state.
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2. Colorado
- Price per gallon, regular:?$3.42
- Cost of living:?18th highest
- Median household income:?$54,046 (15th highest)
- Tax per gallon:?22.0 cents (18th lowest)
Colorado is one of the few states on this list that is relatively wealthy, with the 15th-highest median income in the country. The price of regular gas in the state has actually decreased from $3.46 per gallon to $3.42 over the past five months. Colorado now has the second-cheapest gas price in the country. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the Rocky Mountain states benefit from cheaper crude prices and refinery costs. In March,?The Denver Post?reported that, ?[U.S.] Refineries get most of their oil from within the Rocky Mountain states or nearby parts of the Midwest or from Canada.?
3. Montana
- Price per gallon, regular:?$3.45
- Cost of living:?20th highest
- Median household income:?$42,666 (11th lowest)
- Tax per gallon:?27.8 cents (21st highest)
On July 1, a 12-inch Exxon pipeline buried under the Yellowstone River in Montana broke, releasing tens of thousands of gallons and halting the flow of crude oil from refineries in Billings, Montana. In October, the price of gas in the state was up to $3.63 per gallon. It has now fallen to $3.45 per gallon, the third cheapest in the country. Gas taxes in the state are relatively high, at 27.8 cents per gallon, but the presence of four refineries in the state to process oil from Canada and Montana has helped keep the price low.
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4. South Carolina
- Price per gallon, regular:?$3.56
- Cost of living:?24th lowest
- Median household income:?$42,018 (seventh lowest)
- Tax per gallon:?16.8 cents (fourth lowest)
Five months ago, South Carolina had the second-lowest gas prices in the country at $3.15 per gallon of regular. Today, the state is tied with Utah for the fourth-lowest gas prices in the country at $3.56 per gallon. According to?CBS News, the average price of gas in South Carolina is rapidly approaching $4 per gallon, which may harm the state?s $14 billion tourism industry. Working in the residents? favor is the state?s 16 cents tax on gas -- among the lowest rates in the country, and which has not changed since 1987.
5. Utah
- Price per gallon, regular:?$3.56
- Cost of living:?6th lowest
- Median household income:?$54,744 (13th highest)
- Tax per gallon:?24.5 cents (24th lowest)
While Utah residents have above-average income, the general cost of living is the sixth lowest. One of the reasons for this is the extremely low cost of fuel. The price of regular gas is $3.56 per gallon, down from $3.61 in October. According to the Missouri Economic Research and Information Center, transportation costs are the fifth lowest in the country and utilities costs are the fourth lowest in the U.S.
Click here to read the rest of the states with the cheapest gas.
Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/03/16/10669554-the-10-states-with-the-cheapest-gas
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