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US fuel prices at 4 year high due to Iran war disruption and refinery outages

The average U.S. gas price has risen to its highest level in almost four years. It is up more than 40% since the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran at the end February, according data from the American Automobile Association.

AAA data shows that prices at the pumps were around $4.18 per gallon on February 2, up 11 cents in one month and $1.19 since late February. If crude oil prices rise further, gasoline prices may increase even more. Brent crude futures gained 16% last week and U.S. West Texas Intermediate gained 13%, as supply concerns grew. Prices of oil had taken a breather earlier in the month as hopes of reopening of the Strait of Hormuz were high.

GasBuddy analyst Patrick De Haan said that refinery problems and scheduled maintenance will keep prices high for Midwest consumers. BP's 440,000-barrel-per-day oil refinery in Whiting, Indiana over the weekend experienced a brief power outage that caused one ?of its processing units to be shut down. Phillips 66's ?356,000-barrel-per-day Wood ?River refinery in Illinois took its crude oil unit and some other parts of ?the refinery offline at the end of February ?for a 45-day maintenance period.

Marathon Petroleum's 253,000 bpd Robinson Refinery in Illinois began scheduled maintenance?mid-March. Units are expected to remain offline?until mid-May.

De Haan stated that retailers in the Great Lakes Region could raise prices as soon as today.

(source: Reuters)