Site icon RV PRO

GasBuddy: Hurricane Florence Won’t Create Gas Price Spikes

GasBuddy has now expanded its fuel availability tracker for motorists in Georgia, joining North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia motorists, looking for fuel ahead of Hurricane Florence’s arrival, which has prompted millions of people to evacuate.

“Gasoline availability has been a headache, but the good news is that supply has remained healthy. Stations aren’t able to refill their storage tanks as quickly as motorists are filling up due to the influx of demand,” said Patrick DeHaan, senior petroleum analyst at GasBuddy. “Supply continues to flow out of refineries at normal levels, so the outages at stations are more of a headache than a panic – there’s many stations that still have fuel as refiners and gasoline production have continued countrywide. There have been no refinery shutdowns as a result of Florence.”

Motorists in the affected regions can expect some continued bottlenecks as stations try to catch up. After the storm, power disruptions may make filling up more challenging, but motorists should not worry. There is plenty of gasoline, GasBuddy reported. The delay is due to the logistics of getting gasoline to the stations. More delays may occur after Florence has moved on due to possible storm damage, debris or flooding.

“The good news for motorists is that this is not an event that will result in widespread gas price spikes. Refiners are unhindered and out of the way of the storm, so gasoline keeps flowing,” said DeHaan. “Gas prices are still likely to fluctuate in the days and weeks ahead, but it will likely be due to other factors, such as the price of oil rising or falling. … This event is very unlikely to drive broad large price increases.”

Exit mobile version