VI News Staff 2 years ago

Oil Prices Fall Below $100 For First Time Since May, Giving Hope to Less Pain at the Pump

Fears of recession and slowing demand have led to a pullback in the cost of a barrel of oil, with the U.S. benchmark falling below $100 for the first time since may.

The cost of a barrel of oil had soared to over $130 earlier this year, spurred by a confluence of Russia's war against Ukraine that disrupted once reliable supply lines, and the reopening of economies around the world from Covid-induced lockdowns. Those conditions contributed to sky-high inflation of 8.6 percent in the U.S., a level not seen in over 40 years. To tame inflation, the Federal Reserve has been increasing its benchmark interest rate to cool the economy, which in turn has dimmed traders' demand for oil.

According to the Wall Street Journal, contracts for Brent crude, the international benchmark, dropped $10.73, or 9.5 percent, to $102.77 Tuesday. West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. standard, finished down $8.93, or 8.2 percent, to $99.50 a barrel, its first close below $100 since early May and its largest one-day percentage decline since April, WSJ said.

In the U.S. Virgin Islands, the price for a gallon of regular unleaded gas has dropped slightly from recent highs, but gas still remains expensive compared to earlier in the year. On St. Croix, the cost for a gallon of regular unleaded gas averaged $5.49 as of Tuesday, while St. Thomas averaged $6.00.

If the drop in demand for oil holds, the cost for gas at the pump in the USVI is expected to drop considerably as well once inventory purchased at the higher price margin is depleted and new stock is filled at the lower rate.

The impact of the drop is manifold. The V.I. Water and Power Authority has been receiving roughly $4 million a month since March from the government so that the higher costs are not passed onto consumers. With the price of oil dropping, the government's subsidy to the authority may end or see drastic reductions. Governor Albert Bryan has said the move is a temporary buttress, and WAPA itself has vowed to improve efficiency in a bid to save money.

Falling oil prices could also inform Mr. Bryan's plan to move the territory away from fossil fuels to renewable forms of energy. The governor said he would embark on a plan to make St. Croix 100 percent solar-powered by partnering with a major energy firm that could build and maintain a solar plant powerful enough to easily energize the 84-square mile island. The same plan would be replicated in the St. Thomas-St. John District, according to the governor.

READ MORE: VI CONSORTIUM

U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS WEATHER

A need for speed: Several states are looking for ways to count votes f...

VI News Staff
2 months ago

Can we change how our brains age? These scientists think it’s possible

VI News Staff
8 months ago

Biden bets his agenda on the inside game

VI News Staff
3 years ago

Survey Finds Food Insecurity In The Caribbean Continues On Upward Traj...

VI News Staff
2 years ago

August Tuesday Festival Horse Races are on!- Lesmore Smith - said USVI...

VI News Staff
2 years ago