Pumped up: Hamilton gas prices have hit 2nd highest level on record, expert says - Action News
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Hamilton

Pumped up: Hamilton gas prices have hit 2nd highest level on record, expert says

Hamiltoniansare feeling pain at the pumps with gas prices nearing all-time record levels, according to a petroleum analyst.

Cab drivers among those being hit hard, but expert says prices are nearing their peak

A man pumping gas.
Hamilton's gas prices are nearing record levels, says GasBuddy's head of petroleum analysis. (Bobby Hristova/CBC)

Hamiltoniansare feeling pain at the pumps with gas prices nearing all-time record levels, according to a petroleum analyst.

The average retail price for gas in the city hit135.73 cents per litre on Wednesday. That's the second-highest price Hamilton has ever seen, says Patrick De Haan,head of petroleum analysis for GasBuddy.

"That's up ... 5.6 cents a litre froma week ago. Also up about32 cents a litre from a year ago," he said.

Prices peaked locally in 2014, but the past week hasmarked thehighest pricesGasBuddy, which provides real-time pricing information, has recorded since.

The high costs arehitting cab drivers especially hard.

"For a normal guy, it's probably an extra, at least, 30 to 40 per cent more in fuel costs, which is absurd," saidAnthony Rizzuto, president of Blue Line Taxi.

Jagtar Singh Chahal, Hamilton Cab's chair andCEO, echoed those comments, sayingit impacts the industry as a whole while it struggles to recover from the impacts of COVID-19 and competition fromUber and other ride-hailing companies.

Switching to hybrids

A city report from February found more than 100 taxi drivers had surrendered their plates even before the pandemic.

"There are fewer cabs than before the pandemic. It's not an incentive to attract more and more drivers," said Chahal.

He said in past years, the city allowed local cabs to increase their fare rate due to high gas prices.

One way cab companies are trying to mitigateexpensesis by switchingto hybrid and electric vehicles.

Both companies said they are actively working to add more environmentally friendly optionsto their fleets.

Why are gases prices so high?

The reason gas prices have shot up, De Haan said,is because oil production hasn't caught up to the increased demand for gas now that more people are leaving home.

"Until oil supply returns to pre-COVID levels like demand has, we're going to be paying for it," he said.

Another factor is atruck driver shortage, he said, which means gas stations don't have as much access to fuel.

Cheaper gas, De Haan said, can be found at some wholesale stations, and stationsin Caledonia.

Andthere's hope that in the coming monthspriceswill eventually fall barring natural disasters.

"Oil prices have slipped a little bit here in the last few weeks," De Haan said.

"If we see some sort ofmajor disruption in supply and demand, like a major hurricane or something, in which there's a significant portion of U.S. refineries shut down, that could impact Canada. But barring that, I think we're pretty close to a peak."

Once summer vacations wind down and schools reopen,the analyst said, pricesmight start to come down.

"There should be some relief coming in the fall once we start to see demand decline ... but of course COVID remains a big wild card."