California led the country with gas prices averaging more than $5.28 per gallon of regular unleaded, according to data from AAA. Nevada, Hawaii, Washington state, and Oregon all averaged more than $4.60 per gallon.
Pennsylvania, Arizona, Alaska, New York, Illinois, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Maine, Maryland, Delaware, and Massachusetts averaged more than $4 per gallon, the data shows. Missouri appeared to have the lowest gas prices in the nation at $3.59 per gallon.
Analysts noted that the $4 average, not adjusted for inflation, is the highest since July 2008.
Andy Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates, said that gas prices will likely rise to $4.50 per gallon in the near future.
“Oil buyers are reducing their purchases of refined products from Russia causing Russian refineries to shut down,” he told the Daily Mail. “Dock workers are refusing to unload vessels carrying oil and gas. Insurance rates are skyrocketing causing vessel owners to cancel ship bookings loading in Russia and this is also impacting on the ability of Kazakhstan to sell their oil.”
While Democrats and the Biden administration have started to blame the Russia-Ukraine conflict for the elevated gas prices, those prices had already been rising due to inflation. Months before the conflict, in October, prices in California averaged $4.45 per gallon, Hawaii averaged $4.13, and Nevada $3.90, according to reports.
Critics have said that the Biden administration is trying to pivot away from blaming the high gas prices on inflation, instead of focusing on the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
“The price pressures on households just don’t end,” Bankrate Chief Financial Analyst Greg McBride told The Epoch Times last month.
“Not only have home prices jumped 20 percent in the past year, but now many rents are too, rising 0.5 percent in the past month alone. Nothing squeezes household budgets more than the outsized increases we’re currently seeing on costs for shelter and housing,” he added.