JustTheFacts Max
-
2 hours ago -
Business
California
Gauging Gas prices
Global Market
Oil-Prices
-
57 views -
0 Comments -
0 Likes -
0 Reviews
JTFMax Biz:
Pump Fiction: Who’s Really Driving This Price Tag?
Alright, neighbors—help me out, because I’m standing at the pump watching the numbers spin like a slot machine, and I’m supposed to believe this is just “the market.” Today, the U.S. average for regular gas sits at about $3.20 a gallon. Here in California, the statewide average is hovering around $4.70 or more per gallon—because of course it is.
So let me ask it the way regular people ask it: If America produces a mountain of oil, and we can import more when needed, why does my little trip to the grocery store feel like I’m sponsoring an executive bonus pool?
Here’s the part they don’t put on the big sign: gasoline prices aren’t set by “how much oil is in the United States.” Oil is priced on a global market. When tensions rise somewhere in the world—like the current fears surrounding supply routes in the Middle East—oil traders add a “risk premium.” Crude oil prices jump, and gasoline prices follow almost immediately.
In other words, even if the United States pumps enormous amounts of oil, the price still moves with global anxiety.
But let’s talk about California for a moment, because we’re not just paying more—we’re auditioning for a luxury brand.
California’s fuel system is famously “special.” The state uses its own environmental gasoline blend, which fewer refineries can produce. On top of that, the state has fewer refineries than in the past and relies heavily on those that remain. When just one refinery slows down for maintenance or an outage, supplies tighten quickly.
Then there are taxes and regulations. Combined state and federal fuel taxes in California add close to a dollar per gallon before the fuel even reaches the pump.
And then there’s the uncomfortable question drivers keep asking: when prices jump, why do the biggest oil companies often report strong profits at the same time?
Companies argue those profits reflect investment, risk, and global demand. Consumers, meanwhile, stare at the pump and wonder if the system somehow always lands in the same place.
So I’m asking you—who really benefits when gasoline climbs toward $3.50 nationally and nearly $5 in California?
If this is purely the invisible hand of the market, it must have a pretty firm grip on our wallets. ⛽
Desert Local News is an invitation-only, members-based publication built on fact-checked, non-biased journalism.
All articles are publicly visible and free to read, but participation is reserved for members—comments and discussion require an invitation to join.
We cover local, state, and world news with clarity and context, free from political agendas, outrage, or misinformation.