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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Hawaii to enforce gas price cap; analysts say this spells trouble

Audrey McAvoy Associated Press

HONOLULU — In an effort to gain some control over what motorists pay at the pump, Hawaii will next week begin enforcing a cap on the wholesale price of gasoline.

Analysts said Hawaii, which routinely has some of the highest gasoline prices in the country, runs the risk of making itself less attractive to suppliers as a result of the cap. However, some gave the state credit for developing a pricing model that takes market forces into account.

On Wednesday, the state’s Public Utilities Commission released its first weekly list of price caps for different parts of the state. Including taxes, the maximum wholesalers in Honolulu may charge is $2.74 per gallon.

Hawaii passed the law in 2004 and the first caps go into effect Sept. 1.

If wholesalers charge the maximum $2.74 under the cap and retailers keep their usual 12-cent-per-gallon markup, prices for regular unleaded in Honolulu could rise to $2.86 per gallon.

On Wednesday, the average retail price of regular unleaded in Honolulu was at a record $2.761, some 15 cents above the nationwide average. Statewide, prices average $2.84, the highest in the nation, according to AAA’s Web site.

Prices on Maui have already topped $3 a gallon this week.

Frank Young, a member of Citizens Against Gasoline Price Gouging, said he was confident that over the long run, the caps will ensure Hawaii residents pay fair prices, because they link the state’s wholesale prices to spot prices elsewhere.

“The purpose of the cap is so that we move with the rest of the country,” said Young.

The caps are pegged to an index made up of average wholesale prices in California, the U.S. East Coast and the Gulf Coast, which are all at record highs.