Oil and Gas

Average US gas prices fell a nickel in two weeks: Lundberg

The average price of a gallon of gasoline in the United States fell 5 cents in the past two weeks to its lowest level in more than seven years, according to a survey released on Sunday.

Regular grade gas fell to around $1.77 per gallon in the Feb. 19 survey, from $1.82 on Feb. 7, when the previous survey was taken. The price was the lowest since Dec. 19, 2008, when it was roughly $1.66, survey publisher Trilby Lundberg said in an interview.

The price of fuel is seen on a pump as a customer fills a vehicle at a Sunoco Inc. gas station in Rockbridge, Ohio.
Ty Wright | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The latest price was 56 cents lower than a year ago, mainly in response to weak oil prices, Lundberg said.

After tumbling to their lowest levels since 2003 amid a global glut prior to the last survey, oil prices have stabilized in recent weeks, and demand for gasoline has risen, which could point to higher prices to come, she said.

"It may be that we have finally seen the bottom of this price crash so that prices at the pump would stabilize and perhaps rise by a few pennies per gallon over the next few days."

In the Lundberg panel of around 2,500 gas stations in large cities in 48 states, the lowest average retail price for gas was in Tucson, Arizona, at $1.42 per gallon, and the highest was in San Diego, at $2.40 per gallon.