Gasoline prices in Nevada are unchanged in the past week, averaging $3.33 per gallon Sunday, according to GasBuddyās daily survey of 1,130 stations in Nevada.
This compares with the national average that has increased 1.3 cents per gallon versus last week to $2.87 gallon.
The average price in Carson City is listed at $3.14. Just to the north, in Washoe County, the average price is $3.44 and, in Las Vegas, $3.15.
Average gasoline prices per gallon on July 16 in Nevada have ranged widely over the last five years:
⢠$2.74 in 2017
⢠$2.55 in 2016
⢠$3.28 in 2015
⢠$3.85 in 2014
⢠$3.69 in 2013
Including the change locally during the past week, prices Sunday were 58.8 cents per gallon higher than a year ago and are 1.8 cents per gallon lower than a month ago. The national average has dropped 2.4 cents per gallon during the last month and stands 63.3 cents per gallon higher than a year ago.
āWhile just over half of the nationās states saw average prices moving lower, the other half saw prices fall. A very mixed week as oil prices collapsed Wednesday, opening the door for a round of late-week price drops, but motorists shouldnāt be fooled ā it may not last long,ā Patrick DeHaan, head of petroleum analysis for GasBuddy, said in a release. āTwo things are for sure in oneās lifespan: death and taxes, but you can add uncertainty at the pump, especially this summer.
āPresident Trump has talked about tapping into the nationās Strategic Petroleum Reserve to put downward pressure on oil prices, but this would be a grave mistake and only lead to minuscule drops at the pump and only temporarily. Last weekās plummet in oil prices came thanks to Libya signaling it would resume oil exports, if thereās anything to learn here itās that President Trump has little power over global supply and demand, and if anything, thereās few options for the president to bring real change to gas pumps: slow motorists appetite for fuels, see sustainable increases in production or slow down the abrasive and inflammatory rhetoric that spooks the oil market. Until then, thereās only one predictable outcome for gas prices for the remainder of the summer: volatile.ā