Retail gasoline prices are at about $3.04 a gallon on average
nationwide, the most expensive since 2014, data from the
American Automobile Association showed.
And after a year of lockdowns to curb the coronavirus pandemic,
tens of millions of American road-trippers are expected to be
stung by those prices: More than 34 million Americans are
expected to take to the highways between May 27 and May 31, AAA
expects, an increase of 53% from last year but still down 10%
from 2019.
"Ahead of Memorial Day, gas demand is expected to rise as more
Americans take to the roads for trips that may have been delayed
or avoided because of the pandemic," said Devin Gladden, AAA
spokesperson.
U.S. gasoline demand is running at about 9.48 million barrels
per day, the highest since March 2020, when U.S. officials began
widely restricting travel, Energy Information Administration
data showed.
Pump prices had already gotten a boost earlier this month after
a ransomware attack on Colonial Pipeline, the nation's largest
fuel pipeline, shut the system for days and stopped fuel
supplies from moving across the United States.
Motorists fearing a longer outage raced to gas stations to fill
up their tanks, emptying at one point more than 16,000 stations
across states such as North Carolina, South Carolina and
Georgia.
Around 6,000 gas stations were still without fuel this week,
according to tracking firm GasBuddy.
"This is still due to the Colonial outage recovery, plus high
demand, making it hard for stations to get back on top of
things," said GasBuddy's Patrick De Haan.
(Reporting by Stephanie Kelly; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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