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Heating oil sticker shock to hit New England

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  • Heating oil sticker shock to hit New England

    Many aren't signing up because they are hoping that prices will drop and market prices will be lower next winter than the fixed prices are now.
    If I was back East, getting through next winter would be the #1 concern and would be stockpiling now in fear of rapidly rising prices next winter.

    Anectdotally, I'm hearing more bad news. One friend's family owns a machine shop on the North Shore of Mass. - mostly materials for semiconductor companies - they've started laying off guys over the last two months as orders are way down.

    By CLARKE CANFIELD Associated Press Writer

    PORTLAND, Maine—While people in most of the country may be worried about their summer air conditioning bills, many residents in the

    Northeast are way beyond that: They're already thinking ahead to next winter's heating bills.

    And what those who heat their houses with oil are seeing is giving them sticker shock.

    Retail heating oil prices have risen to more than $4.50 a gallon, nearly double what they were last year at this time. Some oil dealers have delayed rolling out their payment plans for next winter as the world oil markets continue their wild ride.

    Consumers—already on edge with rising gasoline and food prices—will probably be outraged when they calculate their oil bills for next winter, said Jamie Py, president of the Maine Oil Dealers Association.

    "There'll be sticker shock," Py said. "Nobody knows what the price will do. It could go up or the bubble could burst and it could come crashing back down."

    The angst over heating oil prices is particularly acute in New England, where a higher proportion of people use oil as their primary heating source than any other region, ranging from more than 75 percent in Maine to about 40 percent in Massachusetts. Of the 7.7 million U.S. households that heat with oil, nearly 70 percent reside in the Northeast, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.

    William Foss, 61, of Portland, had his heating oil tank topped off Thursday with 115 gallons. At $4.52 a gallon, that ran him about $520—the most he's ever paid for heating oil. But he didn't want to wait until fall for fear it'll go even higher, to $5 or $6 a gallon.

    "If prices still keep going up, they're going to find people frozen to death next winter because they won't have the money to buy oil," Foss said.

    Residents who depend on heating oil have started considering their different payment options for this winter—such as fixed-price, capped-price or prepayment plans.

    Bangor-based Webber Energy Fuels, which operates across Maine and parts of New Hampshire, has been selling fixed-price programs at $4.70 to $4.80 a gallon for next winter, said President Mike Shea. Last year at this time, the price was $2.50 to $2.60.

    In his 32 years in the business, Shea has seen commodity prices rise and fall.

    "But it seems there's only one direction in this market—up," Shea said.

    Fewer customers are signing up for payment plans, he said. Less than 20 percent of his customer base has signed up for fixed-price plans, down from about half two years ago. Many aren't signing up because they are hoping that prices will drop and market prices will be lower next winter than the fixed prices are now.

    In Vermont, many oil dealers have delayed setting up prepurchase contracts because of concerns that prices could plummet, leaving them with expensive inventory they would have to buy at the current high prices, said Matt Cota, executive director of the Vermont Fuel Dealers Association. But it's a gamble.

    "We're talking about lots of money at stake," Cota said. "If Goldman Sachs is right and oil goes even higher, $4.75 is a bargain."

    The residential price of heating oil rose 59 percent from the first quarter of 2007 to the same period this year, far outpacing the price of other heat sources, according to the Energy Information Administration. During the same time, natural gas and electricity prices both rose about 3 percent.

    The government projected this month that heating oil prices will average $3.67 a gallon in 2008, up from $2.72 a gallon last year. Those forecasts are expected to be raised in June.

    At today's prices, homeowners nationwide will be shelling out billions of dollars in cash for heating oil—with nothing extra to show for it.

    In Maine alone, if the more than 400,000 households that heat with oil pay an extra $1 per gallon for 1,000 gallons a year, which is about average, that adds up to an extra $400 million spent on heating oil.

    Those kinds of numbers can end up hurting the economy, as people have less discretionary income left over to spend in restaurants, stores and elsewhere. The high price of oil is one reason why Maine retail sales fell 5 percent in March from a year earlier, said Catherine Reilly, the state's economist.

    While people can't control the price of oil, they can try to cut their consumption. Judy Dorsey of Gardiner halved her oil use last year by making improvements to her home, which was built in 1850.

    After an energy audit of her house, she used a low-interest loan from the Maine State Housing Authority to have her walls and attic insulated, new windows installed, and cracks and holes filled in her foundation, attic and heat ducts.

    She used 350 gallons of heating oil last year, compared with 750 gallons two years ago, saving her hundreds of dollars. She'll save even more this year.

    "I picked the right year to do it," Dorsey said.

  • #2
    Re: Heating oil sticker shock to hit New England

    Originally posted by babbittd View Post
    If I was back East, getting through next winter would be the #1 concern and would be stockpiling now in fear of rapidly rising prices next winter.

    Anectdotally, I'm hearing more bad news. One friend's family owns a machine shop on the North Shore of Mass. - mostly materials for semiconductor companies - they've started laying off guys over the last two months as orders are way down.
    The house I am renting still has oil heat, which is unusual but not unheard of for older homes here in the Pacific Northwest (most have been converted to electric or natural gas). The landlord has the tank filled twice a year and then prorates the cost out to me for six months. I am budgeting for this cost to increase indefinitely! Fortunately, to say our winters here are mild in comparison to the Northeast would be an understatement; hence only topping off the tank twice a year.

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    • #3
      Re: Heating oil sticker shock to hit New England

      Oil used to be a bargain even compared to electric baseboards in the good 'ol days.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Heating oil sticker shock to hit New England

        Originally posted by babbittd View Post
        Oil used to be a bargain even compared to electric baseboards in the good 'ol days.

        ...After an energy audit of her house, she used a low-interest loan from the Maine State Housing Authority to have her walls and attic insulated, new windows installed, and cracks and holes filled in her foundation, attic and heat ducts.

        She used 350 gallons of heating oil last year, compared with 750 gallons two years ago, saving her hundreds of dollars. She'll save even more this year...

        Shows how much potential there is in conservation measures.


        ..."If prices still keep going up, they're going to find people frozen to death next winter because they won't have the money to buy oil," Foss said...

        Can't think of anything worse than finding a family of four, huddled together, frozen to death in the middle of their Toll Brothers mini-mansion because they couldn't afford to heat the monster... :rolleyes:

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        • #5
          Re: Heating oil sticker shock to hit New England

          Originally posted by babbittd View Post
          If I was back East, getting through next winter would be the #1 concern and would be stockpiling now in fear of rapidly rising prices next winter.
          I'm in RI, and I have been. Both in additional funds thrown into savings each month specifically for winter heating (as well as silver eagles and 1/10 ounce gold coins in case things go totally sideway), all new windows just a few weeks ago (I got at wholesale cost and free installation- my buddy has a construction company and I built him a web site in trade), new basement windows two years ago, a zone added to the heating system so I can turn off the heat in the finished basement now that the kids are grown and don't use the downstairs living/sleeping area (one in college and the other in the Coast Guard), etc.

          Heck, I also DIDN'T pull the equity out of my house I bought 6-7 years ago and still have a lot of equity, have paid off our recent-model Ford Focus and Hyundai Elantra cars, paid off all credit cards and cut them up a few years ago, etc.

          I've been preparing for this mess for about 2-3 years. Saw the writing on the wall so-to-speak. My debt-free, efficient car, 1000 sq. ft. upstairs lifestyle will get me through.

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          • #6
            Re: Heating oil sticker shock to hit New England

            Originally posted by Judas View Post
            I paid off all credit cards and cut them up a few years ago, etc.
            Why not keep the cards, carry no balance, pay on time, and still get the benefits like purchase and rental car insurance, 1% cash back, a one month float, an itemized list of what you buy each month, convenience, etc.?

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            • #7
              Re: Heating oil sticker shock to hit New England

              Originally posted by Jay View Post
              Why not keep the cards, carry no balance, pay on time, and still get the benefits like purchase and rental car insurance, 1% cash back, a one month float, an itemized list of what you buy each month, convenience, etc.?
              Because my debit cards give me some of those advantages, if I need credit I have a line of credit with the bank that has no fees and a much lower interest rate that doesn't quadruple if the mailman is slow and in many cases is tax deductible (in case I need 20k fast, but haven't run into that situation yet), etc.

              Anyway, about a decade ago I started hearing the "doomertainers" (that's the right term here, correct?) and a vague sense of paranoia set in that hasn't subsided until the past few years. ;) Once I got on the track of living a relatively spartan lifestyle I realized I liked it, and even the lower-key doomertainers I've been following (like Jim Puplava) keep me in the mindset.

              Don't get me wrong, I still have money going into the 401K. But I have been on a kick for years of getting all my costs down as much as possible, carrying little or no debt, etc. in anticipation of the economic downturn I thought was coming after the tech bubble went insane... I figured so many companies with no revenues for years and market caps in the billions couldn't be right. Little did I know Mr. Greenspan was going to punt it all down the road... Hell, I bought 400 ounces of physical silver and stored it in the eaves for about two years then gave up and sold it. They delayed the crash and I sold too early! ;)
              Last edited by Judas; June 02, 2008, 08:55 PM.

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