Diesel Gains 2.4¢ to $3.825 in Second Straight Increase
Gasoline Dips; Crude Oil Pushes Past $90
Bruce Harmon/Trans Pixs
Diesel’s national average retail price rose for a second straight week, increasing 2.4 cents to $3.825 a gallon, while gasoline dipped after a one-week gain, the Department of Energy said Monday.
Gasoline slipped 1.4 cents to $3.462, following a 5.9-cent gain last week.
Diesel’s price Monday is the highest in five weeks and leaves it 75.8 cents over than the same week a year ago. Gas is 64.5 cents over the same week last year.
The $3.721 per-gallon diesel price two weeks ago was the lowest since late February, when it averaged $3.716 a gallon.
Prior to the two most recent increases — diesel jumped 8 cents last week — trucking’s main fuel had declined 14.7 cents in the previous five weeks of downturns.
Crude oil jumped $3.87 Monday to close the New York Mercantile Exchange trading day at $91.27 a barrel, the highest closing price since Aug. 3, Bloomberg reported.
Each week, DOE surveys about 350 diesel filling stations to compile a national snapshot average price.