logo
Michigan gas prices hit 2025 high with switch to summer blends

Michigan gas prices hit 2025 high with switch to summer blends

Yahoo24-03-2025

Michigan gas prices set a new 2025 high of $3.19 a gallon this weekend but came down two cents Sunday to $3.17. The increase is largely a result of refineries switch to summer blend gasoline, which is more expensive.
The price was up 13 cents from a week ago.
It was 9 cents more than a month ago, but still 41 cents less than this time last year.
Motorists, AAA auto club said, were paying $47 for a full, 15-gallon tank of gasoline.
Throughout Michigan, the most expensive gas averages were in Jackson, $3.24 a gallon; Grand Rapids, $3.23 and Ann Arbor, $3.21; and the least were in Traverse City, $2.95; Marquette, $3.10, and metro Detroit, $3.12.
The national average was $3.13 a gallon.
More: Automakers seek clarity as reports suggest Detroit 3 may avoid big tariffs
"For the first time in over a month, the national average price of gasoline has risen, driven by the final step in the transition to summer gasoline across wide portions of the country," said Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy. "This increase has nothing to do with politics or tariffs — which remain paused for now — but is instead the result of seasonality and is something that happens almost every year."
GasBuddy, like AAA, tracks retail prices at thousands of gas stations nationwide.
De Haan said concerns over refinery maintenance have been muted so far this year, largely due to broader concerns about the U.S. economy and because demand for fuel remains soft.
However, the final step in the transition to summer gas is still weeks away in some regions.
Oil prices are still low, settling last week at about $67 a barrel for West Texas Intermediate.
But it's unclear how tariffs and other global issues will affect gas prices in coming weeks.
President Donald Trump has said "he will impose 25% tariff on countries that buy oil, gas from Venezuela, and on the back of new U.S. sanctions on Iranian exports," Reuters reported Monday.
Talks to end the war in Ukraine could increase the supply of Russian crude to global markets.
Contact Frank Witsil: 313-222-5022 or fwitsil@freepress.com.
This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Michigan gas prices hit 2025 high as refineries switch to summer blend

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Iran carried out implosion tests for nuclear weapons development, IAEA reports
Iran carried out implosion tests for nuclear weapons development, IAEA reports

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Iran carried out implosion tests for nuclear weapons development, IAEA reports

A new IAEA report reveals Iran carried out undeclared nuclear tests, prompting calls to refer the case to the UN Security Council. Much of the IAEA report is based on evidence from the Mossad. The recent special International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) report on Iranian nuclear violations added many points, one being that Iran carried out multiple implosion tests, a key military skill necessary for developing the atomic bomb. Implosion tests do not have civilian nuclear uses. Notably, though much of the report refers to Iranian military activities from 20 years ago, Tehran's careful record-keeping means that any progress that the Islamic Republic made back then could be used to help with a more sudden, rapid push for a breakthrough to a nuclear weapon in 2025. The fact that it carried out various explosive tests also suggests that Iran is further along in other skills needed for developing a nuclear bomb, besides just enriching uranium, than many observers may have thought. This and multiple other findings are analyzed in detail in a position paper introduced this weekend by the Institute for Science and International Security, spearheaded by lead author and president David Albright. According to the think tank, the IAEA Board of Governors must refer Tehran's nuclear violations to the UN Security Council during its meeting, which opens on Monday and runs until June 13. All of this is occurring as the Islamic Republic and the US are the closest they have been to a new nuclear deal in years, but also not far from a possible collapse in the talks, which could lead to an Israeli strike on Iran's nuclear facilities. In a more detailed analysis of the IAEA report, the think tank said that the agency discloses its assessment 'that Iran tested neutron initiators produced at Lavizan-Shian and cites specific dates, but notably, it does not mention a location.' Albright wrote that the IAEA report said instead that 'the EDNS [explosively driven neutron sources] produced at Lavizan-Shian were small-scale, designed for testing, and integrated into scaled implosion systems. [They were] tested on at least two occasions (on February 15 and July 3, 2003).' Next, the May 2025 report also stated anew that the IAEA found indications that 'equipment was developed and tested at Lavizan-Shian that included neutron detectors and housings' and that 'an identical housing for neutron detectors was deployed in an explosive test at Marivan on April 15, 2003.' Further, the IAEA report provided new information about the equipment and materials that were present at Varamin, saying, 'This equipment contained all of the essential equipment for a uranium conversion facility, including small but heavily contaminated (and possibly full) UF6 Cylinders, uranium extractants (such as tributyl phosphate (TBP), uranium extraction and conversion hardware, fluorine-based chemicals (hydrofluoric acid (HF) and potassium difluoride (KHF2), and radiation monitoring equipment.' Moreover, the IAEA said that in sorting the material and equipment and placing it into containers, Iran categorized the items as either 'essential' or 'nonessential.' This resulted in five containers being deemed 'essential' and eight containers being categorized as 'nonessential.' 'The operators of Varamin' also took into account the level of contamination with nuclear material and that one of the containers considered 'essential' was categorized as being 'the highest level of contamination,' containing 'small UF6 Cylinders and other 'special materials,'' according to Albright. The report also concludes that Lavizan-Shian, Marivan, and Varamin, as well as 'other possible related locations,' were 'part of an undeclared structured nuclear program.' It added that Iran retained nuclear material or related equipment from this program at Turquzabad from 2009 to 2018. The whereabouts of these resources is currently unknown. The IAEA also discussed and connected these activities to the missing amount of uranium that was once present at Iran's Jaber Ibn Hayan Multipurpose Laboratory (JHL). Also, Albright wrote that for the first time, 'the IAEA revealed its assessment that the four sites and missing nuclear material in Iran are directly connected.' Moreover, the think tank said that the report provided new information on the extent of Iranian attempts to sanitize locations of interest to the IAEA and provide false information when faced with questions. It stated that 'the provision of inaccurate and sometimes contradictory explanations seriously obstructed' the IAEA's efforts. The atomic watchdog agency said explicitly that although the matters on Lavizan-Shian and Marivan were 'no longer outstanding,' this did not mean the issues were 'resolved.' Much of the IAEA report originated from evidence brought to it by the Mossad, which seized Iran's nuclear archives in 2018.

Office building damaged in Darnytskyi district of Kyiv
Office building damaged in Darnytskyi district of Kyiv

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Office building damaged in Darnytskyi district of Kyiv

An office building has been damaged in the Russian attack on the Darnytskyi district in Kyiv on the night of 8-9 June. Source: Tymur Tkachenko, Head of Kyiv City Military Administration, on Telegram Details: Tkachenko reported that emergency services are working at the scene. "We are assessing the extent of the damage. The information is being confirmed," he wrote. He warned that the attack is ongoing, Russian drones are approaching the capital and new ones are still entering the oblast. Tkachenko urged residents to stay in shelters. Background: The movement of Russian attack UAVs was recorded in several Ukrainian oblasts on Sunday evening. Air defence was responding in the city of Kyiv and Kyiv Oblast. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!

Ukraine's drone attack halts work at electronic plant in Chuvashia, Russia says
Ukraine's drone attack halts work at electronic plant in Chuvashia, Russia says

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Ukraine's drone attack halts work at electronic plant in Chuvashia, Russia says

(Reuters) -Production was temporarily suspended at an electronics company in Russia's Volga river region of Chuvashia, some 1,300 km (800 miles) from the border with Ukraine, after two drones fell on the plant's territory, the head of the region said on Monday. The strike - among the deepest into Russia by a Ukrainian drone in more than three years of the war - caused no casualties, Chuvashia Governor Oleg Nikolayev said in a statement on the Telegram messaging app. But "the responsible decision was made to temporarily suspend production to ensure the safety of employees" of the VNIIR enterprise where the drones fell, Nikolayev said. It was not immediately clear whether the drones caused any damage. Nikolayev said that another drone fell onto some fields in the area of the capital of the region, Cheboksary. The Russian defence ministry - which reports only how many drones were destroyed not how many Ukraine launched - said on Telegram that its units downed two drones over Chuvashia. In total, it said, air defence systems destroyed 49 Ukrainian drones overnight over Russia. According to photos and videos on unofficial Russian and Telegram news channels, the drones sparked a fire at the VNIIR plant that they said produces components for electronic warfare. Reuters could not independently verify the reports. There was no immediate comment from Ukraine. Kyiv has often said that its attacks inside Russia are aimed at destroying infrastructure key to Moscow's war efforts and are in response to the continued Russian strikes on Ukraine. The VNIIR Russian Scientific Research Design and Technological Institute of Relay Engineering with experimental production in Chuvashia is on the U.S. sanctions list, according to the U.S. Treasury website. A Ukrainian drone attack on the Voronezh region that borders Ukraine damaged a gas pipeline, cutting off gas supplies to 22 clients, the region's governor, Alexander Gusev, said on the Telegram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store