Morrow County Sentinel.com

Heating costs to rise this winter as cold returns

NEW YORK (AP) — Amer­i­cans will pay more to heat their homes this win­ter as they feel some­thing they didn’t feel much of last year: cold.

Prices for nat­ural gas, heat­ing oil and other fuels 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 an aver­age of $3.80 per gal­lon, the high­est price ever. That will result in record heat­ing bills, at an aver­age of $2,494. That’s nearly $200 more than the pre­vi­ous high, set in the win­ter of 2010–2011.

Kath­leen Ryan of Cohoes, in upstate New York, is on a pay­ment plan in which she is billed for oil Novem­ber through May to spread out the costs. But with oil prices high and a hint of win­ter chill in the air, she is concerned.

You have no idea what Mother Nature is going to bring,” she said. “They’re already talk­ing about frost this week­end. My costs could double.”

She regrets not switch­ing over to nat­ural gas ear­lier this year when sewer line work in her neigh­bor­hood would have made it eas­ier to run a gas line to her home. But she has a plan to keep a lid on her heat­ing bills. “I’m going to buy a portable heater, an elec­tric heater,” she said.

That could help. Cus­tomers who use nat­ural gas, elec­tric­ity or propane will see lower bills than in a typ­i­cal win­ter because of rel­a­tively low prices. For exam­ple, nat­ural gas should 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.

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.”

Ris­ing heat­ing oil costs come at a time when fund­ing for low-income heat­ing assis­tance is falling. Over the last two years, fed­eral heat­ing assis­tance fund­ing has been cut to $3.5 bil­lion from $5.1 bil­lion. The num­ber of house­holds receiv­ing assis­tance has dropped by 1.1 mil­lion over the period, accord­ing to Wolfe.

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.

Elec­tric­ity prices will fall 2.3 per­cent to 11.4 cents per kilo­watt hour, the gov­ern­ment esti­mates. 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 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 hit record prices 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. Oil has aver­aged $95.95 per bar­rel in the U.S. so far this year, up from an aver­age of $94.86 in 2011.

Con­sumers in the North­east already have an issue with oil: high gaso­line prices. Dri­vers in New Eng­land are pay­ing an aver­age of $3.955 per gal­lon, up 44 cents from a year ago, accord­ing to the Energy Department.

But most of the increase in win­ter heat­ing costs will be due to cooler weather this win­ter. East of the Rock­ies, the 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 decline for this win­ter is just 1 percent.

Rob Hamilton Posted by on Oct 10 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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