How the Industry Arrives at Diesel Fuel Prices
The movement in diesel fuel prices has had a strong impact
in a variety of industries that makes use of diesel not only in
running machinery, but also in transporting goods. This is
because the use of diesel in transportation and energy underlie
a huge number of functions in everyday life. Majority of
delivery trucks, public transport vehicles like trains, buses,
boats, ships and barges, and even construction and farming
equipment, make use of engines that run on diesel fuel. This
means that as the prices of diesel fuel soar, the costs
required in facilitating the activities of which these vehicles
and equipment take part in also increase. This either reduces
the amount of profit these industries can have, or makes them
have to choose the unfortunate option of levying costs on the
retail prices they offer their consumers.
Regardless, anyone who has a stake in the way diesel prices
change or move should at least attempt to understand what
drives these fuel prices from going up or going down. By
understanding what drives these movements and how the prices
are determined, one is able to better foresee and interpret the
various economic indicators that usually point to a time of
increases in prices and the like.
In order to determine how fuel prices are derived, it’s
important to first look at the costs associated with its
production for availability in the retail market. The first
cost to take into consideration is the cost of buying crude
oil. Crude oil is the primary ingredient required in the
production of a variety of fuels, including diesel fuel,
gasoline, and even distillate heating oil. Crude oil prices are
traded in the international market, which subjects it to the
dynamics of international supply and demand. The limited supply
of available crude oil from oil-producing countries, and the
growing need or demand for energy worldwide has helped
maintained competitive prices in the industry.
Next, crude oil enters the process of refining. This is the
stage where crude oil is processed into the different forms of
fuel it will become. Gasoline and diesel fuel primarily differ
in the refining process that is used for it. Originally,
better-refined gasoline was more expensive than diesel fuel;
however, the costs of processing gasoline were overrun by the
price impact of excess demand for diesel fuel. Diesel fuel and
distillate heating oil, on the other hand, are processed using
the same refining process. This is the reason why the increase
in prices in one affects and increases the prices of the
other.
Costs in order to bring the refined oil to the market—both
marketing and distribution—also add material and at times,
expensive costs to diesel fuel. This is because the
transportation of oil, the marketing and advertising operations
of the oil firms, and the manpower necessary to run all these
operations, all involve costs that the company must incur in
order to sell the final refined oil product to the market.
Gasoline stations from where people get both gasoline and
diesel fuel also incur costs for operations, a part of which is
also levied on the retail prices of refined oil.
Over and above these production costs, governments levy
taxes on oil products, creating greater impetus to increase
fuel prices. It is the combination of these cost contributors
that determine the dynamics of diesel fuel prices in the retail
market.
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