Americans have spent an extra $24 billion on gas in just two months thanks to rising prices from Trump's Iran war
Source: The Independent
The Iran war is costing consumers billions of dollars at the gas pump.
Americans have spent $23.9 billion more on gas, year-on-year, since March 1 because of the Iran wars impact on U.S. fuel prices, Patrick DeHaan, head of petroleum analysis at tracking site GasBuddy, posted Tuesday on X.
The astronomical added cost breaks down to $6,462 a second and $23.3 million every hour, DeHaan noted.
Its the equivalent of paying for 1.2 billion hours of daycare; the combined budget for the National Science Foundation, Small Business Administration, and the Department of State; and just $1 billion shy of U.S. costs for the war so far.
Read more: https://www.independent.co.uk/us/money/gas-prices-cost-billions-iran-war-b2970755.html
Walleye
(45,272 posts)OldBaldy1701E
(11,418 posts)?
??
???
Well, the only response reported was some gleeful chortling and a few good ole raspberries towards the poorer parts of town.

(It's all we know.)
TBF
(37,070 posts)I don't doubt that the industry has profited and received tax cuts. Still, one of them is sounding the warning bells. Not that Trump will listen - he doesn't listen to anyone because he is insane and/or suffering from dementia.
Chevron CEO warns of oil shortages from Strait of Hormuz closure
Cris Tolomia
Tue, May 5, 2026 at 7:34 AM CDT 2 min read
Trading disclosure
Physical oil shortages are on the way, Chevron CEO Mike Wirth warned Monday a consequence, he said, of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint through which roughly a fifth of the world's crude oil usually moves.
During remarks at a Milken Institute event reported by Reuters, Wirth said the tightening of supply would force demand lower, with Asian economies among the first to feel the contraction. Wirth invoked the twin energy crises of the 1970s episodes that brought rationing and pump-line gridlock to economies worldwide as a historical parallel, calling the closure's potential impact "potentially as big as in the 1970s."
https://finance.yahoo.com/sectors/energy/articles/chevron-ceo-warns-oil-shortages-123446204.html
58Sunliner
(6,388 posts)sop
(19,132 posts)'$30m an hour: big oil reaping huge war windfall from consumers, analysis finds'
"The worlds top 100 oil and gas companies banked more than $30m every hour in unearned profit in the first month of the US-Israeli war in Iran, according to exclusive analysis for the Guardian. Saudi Aramco, Gazprom and ExxonMobil are among the biggest beneficiaries of the bonanza."
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/apr/15/big-oil-huge-war-windfall-consumers
LiberalArkie
(19,899 posts)Oil prices have been largely determined by commodity traders and global benchmark markets for about 40 years since the launch of WTI (West Texas Intermediate) crude oil futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) in March 1983 CME Group
Before that, oil pricing was dominated by producer-controlled regimes, especially under OPEC, where prices were set by oil-exporting nations rather than by market forces CME Group. The 1970s saw the emergence of spot markets, but these were still influenced heavily by producers.
The 1983 WTI futures contract marked a shift from producer-controlled pricing to free-market price discovery. It created a transparent, liquid derivatives market where global participants could hedge risk, speculate, and set prices based on supply, demand, and market sentiment rather than solely on OPEC decisions CME Group+1.
gab13by13
(32,615 posts)Crude oil should be $200/barrel, the new system seems worse than the old one.
The oil markets are still being manipulated.
LiberalArkie
(19,899 posts)roulette wheel land on red?
AnotherMother4Peace
(5,173 posts)twodogsbarking
(19,207 posts)Oh wait.
AZJonnie
(3,946 posts)And said he would make it worth their while, in so many words.
But hey, "promises made, promises kept", right, magafolk?
Scrivener7
(59,994 posts)LilElf70
(1,624 posts)of this corrupt administration. He fed lies to all his morons that he was going to make things better. They all fell for it. And now EVERYONE is paying the price for the bullshit, and lies. And still NOTHING is better for anyone. NOTHING!!!!
This needs to be a total blowout for the Dems in November.
thought crime
(1,761 posts)The bill becomes due foe electing this foolish evil toddler.
fujiyamasan
(1,977 posts)Oil stocks did well on the run up but the disruption to oil production hasnt led to the profits expected (yet anyways). Exxon and Chevron had earnings on Friday.
https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2026/05/01/exxon-xom-chevron-cvx-q1-2026-earnings.html
By the time the war started most of the gains were already had. The insiders close to the administration likely already profited by then.
LetMyPeopleVote
(181,437 posts)The president still hasnt explained what in the world he was talking about, or why those undefined moves failed so badly.
It was two months ago today when Trump boasted, âYesterday, my administration announced decisive action to help keep down the oil prices.â He quickly added that prices âhave pretty much stabilized.â
— Steve Benen (@stevebenen.com) 2026-05-05T17:06:39.673Z
Today seemed like a good day to revisit that quote.
www.ms.now/rachel-maddo...
https://www.ms.now/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/trump-gas-prices-iran-boast-two-months
It was never altogether clear what decisive actions the president was referring to, but two months later, its painfully clear that those mysterious moves failed to pretty much stabilize prices. MS NOW reported:
The average price for a gallon of gas in the U.S. reached $4.46 [on Monday] as the standstill in the Strait of Hormuz continues to strain global energy markets. The average price for one gallon of diesel fuel topped $5.64, according to national averages tracked by AAA.
A day later, that national average inched higher, reaching $4.48 per gallon, while the average for diesel climbed to $5.66.

An analysis published by Bloomberg News described the recent trend as the sharpest spike in pump prices in at least three decades, and while the president has continued to insist that prices will plummet after the war, the fact remains that (a) its far from clear when the conflict will be over; and (b) dozens of energy sites throughout the Middle East have been struck as part of the war; wells have to be reopened; and some infrastructure will have to be rebuilt, all of which will take time.....
As for Trump, in March, he tried to pitch the public on the idea that higher prices were a good thing a line that proves so foolish that even he didnt repeat it which gave way to the president saying in April that gas prices were not very high.
His latest line, offered on Tuesday morning, argued that higher prices at the pump are a very small price to pay, which is easy for him to say given he doesnt have to worry about paying those prices.
As for the decisive actions he claims to have taken two months ago, that he said pretty much stabilized prices, Trump still hasnt explained what in the world he was talking about, or why those undefined moves failed so badly.
North Coast Lawyer
(261 posts)Looks like oil companies are getting a big return on their investment in Trump/MAGA.
calimary
(90,577 posts)So FIX IT.
Lets see that power-n-swagger shit work. Youre always on about your own omnipotence. Lets see some in THIS case (where you could actually help others than just your damn self!).
Kid Berwyn
(24,904 posts)