The Great Home Heating Oil Price Hike of 2022 Is Here - 19FortyFive

2022-05-14 22:07:35 By : Ms. Charlote Ye

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Americans Hit With Massive Spike In Heating Oil Prices – In the winter of 2020-2021, some 5.3 million households across the United States relied on distillate fuel oil, known as heating oil, as their primary source of heat in their homes. While it is common for Americans to use home heating oil all over the country, some 82% of users came from the Northeast region.

So when fuel prices go up – like for example natural gas – Americans aren’t just paying more at the gas pump – they’re paying more to heat their homes every day during the colder months. 

The United States obtains heating oil from some domestic oil refineries but also imports much of the oil from overseas . With uncertainty in eastern Europe, sanctions against Russia, and NATO allies looking for new sources of oil, fuel supply problems have been amplified and prices have kept growing in recent months. 

Heating oil costs hit a record high at the end of April, with some companies in the state charging as much as $6 per gallon. By comparison, the cost of a gallon of heating oil in October was just $2.50. In many places, the cost of heating oil has risen more dramatically than the cost of gas at the pump.

One Maine resident told WGME that he recently paid $800 to top up his 275-gallon oil tank and that he isn’t sure what their next fill-up will cost.

“You don’t really plan for heating oil to go up that much,” Matt Bucklin said.

The lowest price for Number 2 heating oil was $5.73 per gallon, and the highest price is $6. That may also still go up. 

In Massachusetts, people are seeing similar price hikes, with some suppliers charging more than $6 per gallon – also double the price in the state over last year. 

State Rep. Jim Hawkins, a Democrat, said that he is frequently asked by residents to do something to lower the cost of fuel.

“I get them all the time,” he said of requests for help. “They are not isolated, they usually have issues with rent, food. It’s hardly one issue.”

Residents in the state are often referred to the Attleboro Area Interfaith Collaborative and Self-Help agencies, but many residents are waiting for the state legislature or the federal government to do something to improve the situation. 

Homeowners in Connecticut have seen similarly high prices, with some paying as much as $6.20 per gallon. 

One resident, John Stimpson, told the Hartford Courant that he paid $2.67 in a contract with his oil dealer in April of last year. But after his contract ended last month, he topped up his tank with 17 gallons of fuel at $6.20 – more than double the price from last year.

“I hate the price, but I don’t think he’s ripping me off,” he said.

All homeowners can do is wait to fill up their tanks for the fall – but there is no certainty that waiting will result in lower prices any time soon. 

In March, as heating oil prices exceeded $5 per gallon, industry experts said that homeowners in New England should only purchase the fuel they need until the spring and summer weather arrives, indicating that prices would drop later in the year.

“There’s no need to fill up your tank. The best advice is to buy just what you need because prices will be coming down. This is a spike, and prices will be coming down,” National Energy Assistance Directors’ Association representative Mark Wolfe said at the time .

However, experts also predicted that prices would be falling by now, pointing to predictions that the price of crude oil would surpass $100 per barrel by December of last year and prices peaking in January of this year.

Homeowners can only choose between paying high prices now and potentially paying lower or higher prices later in the year. 

Jack Buckby is a British author, counter-extremism researcher, and journalist based in New York. Reporting on the U.K., Europe, and the U.S., he works to analyze and understand left-wing and right-wing radicalization, and reports on Western governments’ approaches to the pressing issues of today. His books and research papers explore these themes and propose pragmatic solutions to our increasingly polarized society.

Jack Buckby is a British author, counter-extremism researcher, and journalist based in New York. Reporting on the U.K., Europe, and the U.S., he works to analyze and understand left-wing and right-wing radicalization, and reports on Western governments’ approaches to the pressing issues of today. His books and research papers explore these themes and propose pragmatic solutions to our increasingly polarized society.

I know heating oil prices are up. How about an article that identifies that heating oil is a commodity and the refineries don’t set the price, traders do. How about the spread on the spot market versus what the consumer is charged by major fuel oil delivery companies, so the consumer can decide if what they receive is justified by the price. Help me determine if the market is being efficient. I don’t care where the fuel comes from, as long as it burns correctly in my furnace and keeps my family warm.

Ban speculation of commodities and see prices drop. Commodities prices = 85% speculation + 15% supply n demand.

There is another option- ditch fossil fuels. I invested in heat pumps when oil was $2.20 a gallon, and the numbers worked even then.Now t 6 bucks they will have paid for themselves in just a few years. And I get air conditioning for the first time

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