Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,151,640 members, 7,813,130 topics. Date: Tuesday, 30 April 2024 at 07:35 AM

Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US - Foreign Affairs - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Foreign Affairs / Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US (21923 Views)

Sweden Enters Recession As Inflation Hits Consumers / Thousands Of Birds Drop Dead From The Sky In New Mexico (Photos) / Millions Of Locusts Attack India, Residential Areas Turning Sky Black (Photos) (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (Reply) (Go Down)

Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by AnonPoet: 6:53am On Jul 26, 2022
NEW YORK (AP) — When long-haul trucker Deb LaBree sets out on the road to deliver pharmaceuticals, she has strategies to hold down costs. She avoids the West Coast and the Northeast, where diesel prices are highest. She organizes her delivery route to minimize “deadheading” — driving an empty truck in between deliveries.

And if a customer’s load is too far away or they can’t pay more for fuel? She turns the job down.

“It breaks my heart because I either have to say, ‘No, I can’t afford to,’ or ’I can, but you’re going to have to pay some of my fuel to get me there,’ ” LaBree said. “I hate doing both of those things because it’s not the customer’s fault. It’s not our fault.”

The price of diesel fuel has skyrocketed in recent months — much more even than regular gasoline — especially after Russia invaded Ukraine in February. Moscow’s attack led numerous nations to spurn Russian fuel, removing from the market a major source of oil, the main component of diesel fuel, and driving prices drastically up.

For months, motorists have felt the pain of high gasoline prices. Many may not know that they’re also absorbing the impact of much costlier diesel fuel. That’s because the goods consumers buy — from cereal and orange juice to Amazon deliveries of diapers — are delivered by trucks, trains or ships that run on diesel. Those inflated prices are then passed on from company to company until they reach consumers in the form of costlier goods.

People pay less attention to diesel prices because people aren’t going to the pump and using it,” said Matt Smith, lead oil analyst at Kpler, a research firm. “But diesel has a more far-reaching impact and is already having a real big impact across the economy.”

Diesel fuel is averaging $5.50 a gallon nationally — up a scorching 68% from a year ago, when it was selling for just $3.27. By comparison, a gallon of regular gasoline is averaging $4.47, up 41% from a year ago.

High gasoline prices have eased somewhat in recent weeks. But diesel has remained chronically high, with American refineries operating near capacity. Unless prices ease, the ripple effects of high diesel fuel could worsen because the costs are deterring some truck companies from accepting jobs unless they can persuade their customers to pay more for fuel.

“There will be more logistical shortages,” said Phil Verleger, a longtime energy economist. “Americans will find more empty shelves and higher prices.”

If they’re not rejecting jobs, many truckers are choosing lighter loads or working longer hours to make up for money lost on fuel, according to interviews with truckers and industry executives. Farmers harvesting hay and planting corn with diesel-fired tractors are absorbing a financial hit. Delivery companies are installing their own fueling pumps to cut costs. Ultimately, consumers are left bearing the burden.

“If you’re a farmer, then your energy costs are higher, and therefore it’s costing more to produce grain, and that’s pushing the price of grain up, and that’s pushing the price of food up,” said Smith, the analyst at Kpler.

Even more than gasoline, high diesel prices are magnifying the costs of goods because the delivery cost has risen so much. Consumer prices soared 9.1% in June compared with 12 months earlier, the government reported last week. The fuel oil portion of the consumer price index nearly doubled from the same time last year.

“Those energy costs are working their way into products, all manner of different consumer products,” Smith noted.

One reason why diesel prices haven’t yet declined as gasoline has is that OPEC nations have slowed their supply of oil, and Middle East oil typically produces more diesel fuel than, say, parts of Texas do. Another factor is that China has reduced its diesel exports, presumably to help achieve its net-zero greenhouse gas emissions goals.

And within the United States, refineries that produce diesel from crude oil are essentially maxed out. The nation has 11 fewer refineries operating today than before the pandemic, according to the American Petroleum Institute. One refinery that had served the East Coast closed after an explosion in 2019 and never re-opened. And some refineries in California are closed for retrofitting to process renewable fuel.

“We use a lot of diesel, probably more than what these refineries can produce,” said Bob Costello, chief economist of the American Trucking Associations.

President Joe Biden’s visit last week to Saudi Arabia was intended, in part, to encourage OPEC to produce more oil, which would mean more diesel fuel globally. Though no major deal was announced, Prince Mohammed bin Salman hinted that Saudi Arabia could potentially produce more oil.

But expecting OPEC to export more oil during high-demand summer months might be unrealistic, said Amy Myers Jaffe, an energy expert at Tufts University.

“The important thing,” she said, “is to make sure that our allies, together with OPEC, don’t decrease any flows to the market at any junction, especially if we have some kind of disruption.”

Even if American oil and gas producers increase production, tough challenges would remain — namely, finding additional refinery space and then enough pipeline capacity to transport any additional diesel.

In the meantime, some truckers are struggling to adjust while keeping goods moving. Sherri Brumbaugh, who runs a fleet of 90 trucks as head of Garner Trucking, has installed more fuel pumps on-site in Findlay, Ohio, because she can obtain diesel more cheaply than her truckers can on the road.

She also monitors where her drivers are buying fuel to make sure they’re making wise decisions. And she tries to absorb the higher fuel costs herself as much as possible.

But “at some point,” she said, “you’ve got to go to the customer and say, ‘I’ve got to increase this rate.’ ”

Brumbaugh declined to say how much she’s raised rates on her customers, which range from bottled beverage companies to dishwasher manufacturers.

Lately, she said, there’s been less retail freight to haul. “It may be an indication of a recession,” she said. “I hope not.”

Cargo Transporters, which runs 470 trucks and 1,800 trailers, raised its rates, too, and has been turning down some jobs to Florida, where trucks often must return without a load, said Shawn Brown, a company executive. When there’s no cargo on a truck, no one pays the trucking company. But the driver still has to be paid, and fuel is still burned.

“When that trailer’s not loaded and there’s no revenue being generated and a mile is run, we’re eating that,” Brown said.

UPS and FedEx have more than doubled their fuel surcharges on ground deliveries year-over-year, according to calculations by Cowen Research and AFS Logistics.

Farmers also face higher costs. But they can’t easily raise prices, because they often don’t control the price of their goods. Milk and grain prices, for example, are set by the market.

“It’s costing us more for freight to get things delivered to the farm, and it’s costing more to haul things away,” said David Fisher, a dairy farmer in Madrid, New York, who is president of the New York Farm Bureau, which lobbies governments on behalf of farmers. “We’re planting crops and harvesting crops, and the cost of those are going to be higher, but we don’t know if we can recoup those costs.”

To burn less fuel, he’s considered skipping a tillage pass, a maneuver whereby a tractor manipulates soil to enhance crop growth. But doing so would risk having fewer crops to harvest.

A year ago, Fisher was spending $8,000 a week on fuel. This year, he said, the figure reached around $20,000.

“Everybody I talk to has quite a bit of anxiety over these fuel prices,” Fisher said.

Biden has called on Congress and states to suspend their gasoline or diesel taxes for a few months to help alleviate pain for drivers, but Congress appears unwilling to enact a tax holiday. Some states temporarily suspended some taxes on diesel and other motor fuels.

With high diesel prices persisting, LaBree and her husband are working more hours to manage costs. They used to stay on the road for four days and come home to Missouri for three. Now, she said, “we have to stay out for five — sometimes six — days to make up for what we’ve lost from fuel.”

“Most truckers like to think of ourselves as, we’re serving our country, moving goods around to keep America going,” LaBree said. “But at what point are we doing it for free? I can’t run a business that way.”
https://apnews.com/article/middle-east-prices-climate-and-environment-21dd211bcccb049fc1e20e4ca36220be?taid=62dd73c2fcad210001329bad&utm_campaign=TrueAnthem&utm_medium=AP&utm_source=Twitter

3 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Mynd44: 6:59am On Jul 26, 2022
41% increase ke?

5 Likes

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Boyooosa(m): 7:00am On Jul 26, 2022
Another sad news from US that will give our leaders undue morale...sad

71 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by adecz: 7:01am On Jul 26, 2022
undecided


Oyibo too complain.


40 to 60% increase in anything & dem
go dey shout.

For 9ja, diesel & cooking gas prices
have gone up over 200% in the last one
year & we are still saying "Sai Jagaba"
for Higher Ne❌t Le✔️el 2023 ❗️❗️


Before Buhari commot, dollar go
be 1500 & petrol N600/ litre.

Don't say I didn't tell you.

57 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Busayo58(m): 7:01am On Jul 26, 2022
Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Toneypen247(m): 7:01am On Jul 26, 2022
H
Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by kerry57: 7:01am On Jul 26, 2022
The domino effect of the Russia and Ukraine war.
Make Putin take him time and reset him brain asap.

16 Likes 1 Share

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by GardenOfGod(m): 7:02am On Jul 26, 2022
Is alright. Lia Muhammad will soon come up with his comparison nonsense, not taking cognizance of the fact that even at that, $1 = #600 grin

15 Likes 1 Share

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Rapuru14: 7:02am On Jul 26, 2022
US miss Trump.

This won't have happened under him with his drive towards energy independence for the US.

24 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Bizibi(m): 7:02am On Jul 26, 2022
The excuses gang will soon litter this thread...

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Antoeni(m): 7:02am On Jul 26, 2022
Buhari is Just Causing Problems Everywhere in the World

17 Likes 1 Share

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Bnladan(m): 7:02am On Jul 26, 2022
Na wa oo
Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Moh247: 7:03am On Jul 26, 2022
cool


Wahala

1 Like

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by BigBelleControl(m): 7:03am On Jul 26, 2022
In as much as these issues are happening everywhere In the world, just like Fashola defended the government on Sunday, our problem is that the government doesn't seem to have an idea on how to cushion the effects.

Cluelessness of the highest order.

8 Likes

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Justinlean02(m): 7:03am On Jul 26, 2022
Inflation everywhere grin, recently Zimbabwe currency crashed and they device means to create a Gold currency to tackle this issue, but Nigeria CBN claiming a wise ass was only able to create an imaginary E Naira.

9 Likes 1 Share

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Linkai447(m): 7:03am On Jul 26, 2022
Ok
Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by jojothaiv(m): 7:03am On Jul 26, 2022
It rains everywhere...
Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Sixfiguresmart(m): 7:04am On Jul 26, 2022
Aren't we really stupid? The squeeze in this country does not make the headlines. We are more into the squeeze elsewhere. The US can fix itself. The got their problems. They never capture the problems in Nigeria except the chaos and crisis. Can we just talk about the fact that we have talents in this country that need subsidy on computer courses to excel?

Our athletes need funds to excel. Can we start there?

7 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by aribisala0(m): 7:04am On Jul 26, 2022
Still cheaper than Coca Cola

68 Likes

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by ClassicMan202(m): 7:04am On Jul 26, 2022
Waiting for APC dumbos to come and mastubate on this thread about how the US is facing same problems with 9ja


27Pushing30:


Its you who is a dumbasss for not understanding the differences in Nigeria's economic pillars and that of the USA... if advance european and Asian markets can be reeling do you expect their customer's like Nigeria who rely on their raw materials and finished goods to be smiling?

I keep saying it that the average APC critic is very very ignorant.




An average in fact the most intelligent APC supporter is brainless..

What happened to the 1 refinery per year that was promised?? How about Ajaokuta steel company that has been commissioned years ago but still has not produced a kilogram of steel??

You think it is just to sit down and be saying even the US is facing the same fate.

What has the govt done to ameliorate the hardship??

6 Likes

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by GardenOfGod(m): 7:04am On Jul 26, 2022
Hhhh
jojothaiv:
Gggg
Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by TA4TA4: 7:05am On Jul 26, 2022
Hmm
Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Mrmanability: 7:05am On Jul 26, 2022
It is a global problem.. but even in Nigeria where we have the resources of producing it. We suffer the most.

2 Likes

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Danny50: 7:05am On Jul 26, 2022
I blame buhari and tinubu

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by GardenOfGod(m): 7:05am On Jul 26, 2022
Hwwc
ClassicMan202:
Gvvb
Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by iwaeda: 7:06am On Jul 26, 2022

3 Likes

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by GeneralPula: 7:06am On Jul 26, 2022
Rapuru14:
US miss Trump.

This won't have happened under him with his drive towards energy independence for the US.
Well, no one knows Putin will invade Ukraine and there’s nothing trump would have done aside from asslicking putin.

69 Likes

Re: Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Truckers, Farmers, Consumers In The US by Ishitinyourlife: 7:07am On Jul 26, 2022
Mrmanability:
It is a global problem.. but even in Nigeria where we have the resources of producing it. We suffer the most.
The US produce ten times more oil than Nigeria

13 Likes 1 Share

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (Reply)

ISIS Hit By Financial Crises, Slashes Salaries Of Fighters / Donald Trump: "I Regret Things I Have Said That Caused Pain" / 27 Attorneys-General to US Supreme Court: Trump should be on the ballot

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 39
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.