Let's add insult to injury... just what we need to make the economy stronger - higher heat bills!!
Americans will pay more to heat their homes this winter as they feel something they didn’t feel much of last year: cold.
Fuel prices will be relatively stable, but customers will have to use
more energy to keep warm than they did a year ago, according to the
annual Winter Fuels Outlook from the Energy Department’s Energy
Information Administration.
Last winter was the warmest on record. This year temperatures are expected to be close to normal.
Heating bills will rise 20 percent for heating oil
customers, 15 percent for natural gas customers, 13 percent for propane
customers and 5 percent for electricity customers, the EIA announced
Wednesday.
Heating oil customers are expected to pay the highest heating oil
prices ever. That will result in record heating bills, with an average
of $2,494. That’s nearly $200 more than the previous high, set in the
winter of 2010-2011.
Customers who use natural gas, electricity or propane will see lower
bills than they have in previous typical winters – even with the
increase over last year – because prices are relatively low.
“It’s two different worlds. For most families this is still going to
be an affordable year, except for those who use oil heat,” says Mark
Wolfe, the Executive Director of the National Energy Assistance
Director’s Association. “For them, it’s going to be very difficult.”
Just 6 percent of the nation’s households use heating oil, but they
tend to be in some of the coldest parts of the country where heating
needs are high, mainly in the Northeast. About half use natural gas for
heat and 38 percent use electricity. Five percent of households use
propane and 2 percent use wood.
Natural gas prices
will average $10.32 per thousand cubic feet. That’s 0.8 percent higher
than last year but 13 percent lower than the five-year average.
Electricity prices will fall 2.3 percent to 11.4 cents per kilowatt
hour. Propane prices will fall 8 percent in the Midwest to $2.02 per
gallon and 13 percent in the Northeast to $2.95 per gallon.
Natural gas, propane and electricity prices are relatively low
because of a dramatic increase in domestic natural gas production over
the last five years. Natural gas is used to generate about one-third of
the nation’s electricity and it is instrumental in setting the price of
electricity. Recently drillers have been increasing production of
so-called natural gas liquids, including propane.
Heating oil will average a record high of $3.80 per gallon because it
is made from crude oil. Crude is priced globally, and has stayed high
because of increasing world demand, worries about supply disruptions in
the Middle East, and stimulus programs from central banks around the
world that encourage investment in oil and other commodities.
But most of this year’s increase is because forecasters expect a more
typical winter. East of the Rockies, weather is expected to be about 2
percent warmer than normal but 20 percent to 27 percent colder than last
year. In the West, temperatures were closer to normal last year, so the
expected increase for this winter is just 1 percent.