Weekly DOE/EIA price climbs for 11th week in a row

Weekly DOE/EIA price climbs for 11th week in a row

The increase in the weekly Department of Energy/Energy Information Administration diesel price, the basis for most fuel surcharges, is starting to make history.

It rose this week to $2.695 a gallon, an increase of 2.6 cents. That is the 11th consecutive week that it has moved higher.  

Since the EIA started the series back in 1994, there have been only three times with a series of increases as long as the one that the market is going through now. 

There were two instances of 15-week increases, or in one case, an almost 15-week increase. 

In 1999, between June and October, the DOE/EIA price rose for 13 weeks, was flat for one week, and then rose again for a 15-week streak of increases or no decreases. During that time, the price rose to $1.232 from $1.059, a gain of 16.3%.

The one time that it rose for 15 consecutive weeks began in December 2010 and ran into March 2011. Over that 15-week period, the weekly DOE/EIA price rose to $3.908 a gallon from $3.162 a gallon, for a gain of 23.5%. 

The more recent 11-week increase was between July 2012 and September 2012. During that 11-week increase, the same duration as the current run, the price moved up to $4.135 a gallon from $3.683, marking a 13.3% increase.

In the current climb, the upward price move started with the second weekly report of November. In the most recent week when it posted a decline, it stood at $2.372. Its upward move to $2.695 a gallon marks an increase of 13.6%. 

The commodity prices of ultra low sulfur diesel have traded in a tight range in the past week but closed out slightly higher since the prior Monday. ULSD on the CME commodity exchange settled Monday at $1.5987 a gallon, up a little more than 2.5 cents a gallon since the settlement Jan. 11 of $1.5735 a gallon. But the week in between saw one-day increases of 2.3 and 2.05 cents and a one-day drop of 2.65 cents.  

The latest DOE survey of the retail market to determine the price was delayed a day due to the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.

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The increase in the weekly Department of Energy/Energy Information Administration diesel price, the basis for most fuel surcharges, is starting to make history.

It rose this week to $2.695 a gallon, an increase of 2.6 cents. That is the 11th consecutive week that it has moved higher.  

Since the EIA started the series back in 1994, there have been only three times with a series of increases as long as the one that the market is going through now. 

There were two instances of 15-week increases, or in one case, an almost 15-week increase. 

In 1999, between June and October, the DOE/EIA price rose for 13 weeks, was flat for one week, and then rose again for a 15-week streak of increases or no decreases. During that time, the price rose to $1.232 from $1.059, a gain of 16.3%.

The one time that it rose for 15 consecutive weeks began in December 2010 and ran into March 2011. Over that 15-week period, the weekly DOE/EIA price rose to $3.908 a gallon from $3.162 a gallon, for a gain of 23.5%. 

The more recent 11-week increase was between July 2012 and September 2012. During that 11-week increase, the same duration as the current run, the price moved up to $4.135 a gallon from $3.683, marking a 13.3% increase.

In the current climb, the upward price move started with the second weekly report of November. In the most recent week when it posted a decline, it stood at $2.372. Its upward move to $2.695 a gallon marks an increase of 13.6%. 

The commodity prices of ultra low sulfur diesel have traded in a tight range in the past week but closed out slightly higher since the prior Monday. ULSD on the CME commodity exchange settled Monday at $1.5987 a gallon, up a little more than 2.5 cents a gallon since the settlement Jan. 11 of $1.5735 a gallon. But the week in between saw one-day increases of 2.3 and 2.05 cents and a one-day drop of 2.65 cents.  

The latest DOE survey of the retail market to determine the price was delayed a day due to the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.

More articles by John Kingston

Why the feared IMO2020 spillover effect on diesel markets didn’t happen

Key price spread in diesel market affirms tightening inventories

Good news for diesel consumers, tough news for oil patch drivers in federal report