Aiming to lower gas prices, feds boost supply in time for the 4th – The Mercury News

By Anna Helhoski | NerdWallet

Gas prices could be about to get cheaper, just in time for summer road travel, as about 42 million gallons of gasoline makes its way into the fuel market.

In May, the Biden administration announced that the one million barrels of gasoline in the Northeast Gasoline Supply Reserve were up for sale. Contracts were awarded to five companies, and barrels were sold at an average of $2.34 per gallon. The gasoline was released to the contracted companies as of June 30.

Amos Hochstein, deputy assistant to the president and senior advisor for energy and investment, says the release of gas should soon help drive down costs at the pump or, at least, prevent the price from increasing.

“It’s not even oil — it’s a million barrels of gasoline directly into the gas market,” says Hochstein, who is the leading expert and advisor to President Joe Biden on gasoline. By contrast, when oil reserves are released it still takes time to refine into gasoline. This action will move gas into the U.S. supply faster, but it’s one that can’t be done very often, says Hochstein.

“This is a one shot deal,” says Hochstein, adding that it was timed before July Fourth to blunt the pressure on gas supply due to travel demands.

For context, 42 million gallons is about 11% of the total amount of gas that vehicles guzzle each day in the U.S., about 376 million gallons.

Lowering gas prices doesn’t just benefit the average driver, it also means trucks that deliver supplies and food can run on cheaper fuel. Gas costs are factored into overall prices of goods, so cheaper gas can, theoretically, bring down prices — or at least prevent them from going up.

Cheaper gas prices certainly can’t hurt Biden, whose campaign is still reeling from last week’s debate in which the president’s performance was so poor it prompted a bevy of outlets to call for him to bow out of his bid for reelection. Presidents don’t control gas prices, but they can enact policies related to drilling, refining and, in the case of today’s news, releasing gas from reserves. Those actions can ultimately impact what drivers pay at the pump.

Who will see cheaper gas?

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