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Community campaign collecting donations for Haiti victims
Region makes way for latest batch of snow; cancellations rise
Family says Rottweiler was trying to rescue owner, didn't kill her
Job openings plunged by one-quarter last year
Downtown Akron restaurants serve up 79,000 pounds of cardboard for recycling
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Another winter punch heading toward Ohio
Complaints against officer keep coming
Police say couple had 50 stolen hubcaps
Woman rescued after falling through rotting floor in house
Man robbed at Tallmadge Avenue eatery
Police: Ohio girl dies after fall into snow bank
Police: Man tries to buy crack with credit card
Strip club hosts 'Lap dances for Haiti'
Four teens restrain man, take items from his Akron home
Teen driver crashes into Bath Twp. home
Cuyahoga Falls residents come home to find burning couch on balcony
Cleveland named worst U.S. city for winter weather; Columbus is No. 8
Blogs:
First Bell - On Education:
No City of Akron basketball tonight
Pets:
Pet telethon re-airs
The Heldenfiles:
NBC Releases Olympics Announcer List
Akron Zips:
Zips favored on road against MAC West leader
Tribe Matters:
Blogmail response on Hafner
Cleveland Browns:
Stallworth's contract terminated
Balanced Ledger:
QB in Browns future: another mock draft
Kent State Sports:
KSU Notes – February 9
Cleveland Cavaliers:
Gameblog: Cavs vs. New Jersey Nets
Buckeye Blogging:
Buckeyes grab 18 players on signing day
Varsity Letters:
Five local gridders to play in Big33
All Da King's Men:
Palin At The Tea Party Convention
Blog of Mass Destruction:
Republican Pre-Conditions
Akron Law Café:
Law, Love and Chocolate
Car Chase:
Collector Car Hobby Loses One of the Best—Jim Roll
Let's Talk Real Estate:
Decisions Decisions: Credit Cards or Your Mortgage?
Ohio Travels with Betty:
Loucile is looking for a Lake Erie getaway in June for three kids, ages 1, 3, and 5.
Sound Check:
Talk of the Town – Top entertainment picks for the weekend
HRLite House:
OFCCP Report
Akron Gamer:
Makers of 'Castle Crashers' unveil 'BattleBlock Theater'
See Jane Style:
Do IT this week: Layering
By H. Josef Hebert
Associated Press
POSTED: 09:02 a.m. EDT, Oct 07, 2008
WASHINGTON: Although global oil prices have plummeted, the cost of heating your home this winter will be a lot more expensive, especially for households that depend on fuel oil, the Energy Department predicted today.
Households that use fuel oil can expect to spend an average of $2,388 or $449 more than last year for the October-April heating season. Users of natural gas will pay less than half that, $1,010 on average, still $155 more than last year.
The department's Energy Information Administration emphasized that the cost figures should be viewed as ''a broad guide'' comparing this year's expected heating costs to last winter and said actual expenses can vary depending on region, local weather and the energy efficiency of individual homes.
But across the board, whether one uses heating oil, natural gas, propane or electricity, costs will be higher, said the agency.
Users of electricity to heat homes will see the smallest increase, about 10 percent on average, followed by propane, 11 percent; natural gas, which is used in more than half of the nation's homes, 18 percent; and heating oil, used widely in the Northeast, 23 percent.
That's not good news for a country where people have been reeling from a summer of record $4-a-gallon gasoline, a booming credit crisis and a struggling economy.
Energy experts say some people have yet to pay last winter's heating bills or the summer's air conditioning costs. A recent Associated Press survey found that utility shutoffs because of unpaid bills have been running 17 percent to 22 percent higher than last year in some parts of the country.
The Energy Department said it expects the price of fuel oil will average $3.90 a gallon, 60 cents more than last winter.
While the cost of crude oil has declined from a high of $147 a barrel in July to just under $88 a barrel for delivery in November, the department said ''oil markets are expected to remain relatively tight because of sluggish production growth.'' Barring a worse than expected global economic decline, prices are likely to edge back up to about $112 a barrel, the agency said.
Partly because of refinery shutdowns caused by the two recent Gulf coast hurricanes, distillate inventories fuel oil and diesel are expected to be lower going into the heating season than last year, said the agency. Fuel oil is used by about 7 percent of the nation's households.
Natural gas supplies will be plentiful this winter, with storage in November expected to be well above the five-year average, the gas supply industry said earlier this week. And wholesale gas prices have dropped to nearly where they were a year ago after soaring this summer.
Still, the retail cost of natural gas for heating is expected to be 18 percent higher this winter.
''Much of the natural gas utilities will deliver to households this year was purchased when prices were at or near these historic highs,'' said Chris McGill of the American Gas Association, which represents 202 local natural gas utilities across the country. That higher price will, for the most part, be passed on.
Meanwhile, people are using much less oil this year because of high prices at the gasoline pumps and the weakening economy, the Energy Department said.
Total U.S. petroleum consumption this year is expected to average 19.8 million barrels a day, or 830,000 barrels fewer than in 2007, followed by a further 100,000-barrel-a-day decline expected in 2009, according to the EIA report.
On the other hand, the agency said, domestic oil production this year will drop below an average of 5 million barrels a day for the first time since 1946 because of declining fields and the disruptions caused in the Gulf of Mexico by Hurricanes Ike and Gustav.
WASHINGTON: Although global oil prices have plummeted, the cost of heating your home this winter will be a lot more expensive, especially for households that depend on fuel oil, the Energy Department predicted today.
Households that use fuel oil can expect to spend an average of $2,388 or $449 more than last year for the October-April heating season. Users of natural gas will pay less than half that, $1,010 on average, still $155 more than last year.
The department's Energy Information Administration emphasized that the cost figures should be viewed as ''a broad guide'' comparing this year's expected heating costs to last winter and said actual expenses can vary depending on region, local weather and the energy efficiency of individual homes.
But across the board, whether one uses heating oil, natural gas, propane or electricity, costs will be higher, said the agency.
Users of electricity to heat homes will see the smallest increase, about 10 percent on average, followed by propane, 11 percent; natural gas, which is used in more than half of the nation's homes, 18 percent; and heating oil, used widely in the Northeast, 23 percent.
That's not good news for a country where people have been reeling from a summer of record $4-a-gallon gasoline, a booming credit crisis and a struggling economy.
Energy experts say some people have yet to pay last winter's heating bills or the summer's air conditioning costs. A recent Associated Press survey found that utility shutoffs because of unpaid bills have been running 17 percent to 22 percent higher than last year in some parts of the country.
The Energy Department said it expects the price of fuel oil will average $3.90 a gallon, 60 cents more than last winter.
While the cost of crude oil has declined from a high of $147 a barrel in July to just under $88 a barrel for delivery in November, the department said ''oil markets are expected to remain relatively tight because of sluggish production growth.'' Barring a worse than expected global economic decline, prices are likely to edge back up to about $112 a barrel, the agency said.
Partly because of refinery shutdowns caused by the two recent Gulf coast hurricanes, distillate inventories fuel oil and diesel are expected to be lower going into the heating season than last year, said the agency. Fuel oil is used by about 7 percent of the nation's households.
Natural gas supplies will be plentiful this winter, with storage in November expected to be well above the five-year average, the gas supply industry said earlier this week. And wholesale gas prices have dropped to nearly where they were a year ago after soaring this summer.
Still, the retail cost of natural gas for heating is expected to be 18 percent higher this winter.
''Much of the natural gas utilities will deliver to households this year was purchased when prices were at or near these historic highs,'' said Chris McGill of the American Gas Association, which represents 202 local natural gas utilities across the country. That higher price will, for the most part, be passed on.
Meanwhile, people are using much less oil this year because of high prices at the gasoline pumps and the weakening economy, the Energy Department said.
Total U.S. petroleum consumption this year is expected to average 19.8 million barrels a day, or 830,000 barrels fewer than in 2007, followed by a further 100,000-barrel-a-day decline expected in 2009, according to the EIA report.
On the other hand, the agency said, domestic oil production this year will drop below an average of 5 million barrels a day for the first time since 1946 because of declining fields and the disruptions caused in the Gulf of Mexico by Hurricanes Ike and Gustav.
great the best is yet to come
OK. I am very certain that I heard on the local Cleveland news just last week that the price of natural gas was not going to be higher. That they had plenty for this winter. Please make up your minds..
Does anybody really know what they are talking about. I wonder.
they just want to squeeze as much cash out of us as possible.
if they can come up with an excuse to charge more...to line their pockets more.....they will do it.. shows where their concerns are not the customers.....their pockets only.
