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Winter Gasoline Revisited [how winter gas & summer gas differ, & why winter gas is cheaper]
The Oil Drum ^ | September 26, 2008 | Robert Rapier

Posted on 09/26/2008 7:38:17 AM PDT by Mike Fieschko

This is a reposting of an article written by Robert Rapier two years ago, on how winter gasoline differs from summer gasoline, and why this tends to make winter gasoline less expensive than summer gasoline. We also now have a lot of reports of gasoline outages due to short supply following Hurricanes Gustav and Ike. Feel free to discuss those in this thread also.

Every year in late summer, you will start hearing references in the media about the conversion to winter gasoline, such as the following (originally in the Bradenton Herald, but the link is long dead):

Motorists can thank a mild hurricane season in the Atlantic for the lower gas prices, according to the American Automobile Association.

Other factors include the end of the summer driving season and a cheaper winter fuel mix.

Gas stations sell a special, more expensive fuel blend during the summer to cut down on smog during hot months. Stations nationwide will start selling a less-expensive winter fuel blend Friday, which could lead to even lower prices, analysts said.

So what does this mean, and why does it make winter gasoline less expensive?

A Primer on Gasoline Blending

Gasoline is composed of many different hydrocarbons. Crude oil enters a refinery, and is processed through various units before being blended into gasoline. A refinery may have a fluid catalytic cracker (FCC), an alkylate unit, and a reformer, each of which produces gasoline blending components. Alkylate gasoline, for example, is valuable because it has a very high octane, and can be used to produce high-octane (and higher value) blends. Light straight run gasoline is the least processed stream. It is cheap to produce, but it has a low octane. The person specifying the gasoline blends has to mix all of the components together to meet the product specifications.

There are two very important (although not the only) specifications that need to be met for each gasoline blend. The gasoline needs to have the proper octane, and it needs to have the proper Reid vapor pressure, or RVP. While the octane of a particular grade is constant throughout the year, the RVP spec changes as cooler weather sets in.

The RVP is the vapor pressure of the gasoline blend when the temperature is 100 degrees F. Normal atmospheric pressure varies, but is usually around 14.7 lbs per square inch (psi). Atmospheric pressure is caused by the weight of the air over our heads. If a liquid has a vapor pressure of greater than local atmospheric pressure, that liquid boils. For example, when you heat a pot of water, the vapor pressure increases until it reaches atmospheric pressure. At that point, the water begins to boil.

In the summer, when temperatures can exceed 100 degrees F in many locations, it is important that the RVP of gasoline is well below 14.7. Otherwise, it can pressure up your gas tanks and gas cans, and it can boil in open containers. Gas that is boiled off ends up in the atmosphere, and contributes to air pollution. Therefore, the EPA has declared that summer gasoline blends may not exceed 7.8 psi in some locations, and 9.0 psi in others.

A typical summer gasoline blend might consist of 40% FCC gas, 25% straight run gas, 15% alkylate, 18% reformate, and 2% butane. The RVP of the gasoline blend depends on how much of each component is in the blend, and what the RVP is of each component. Butane is a relatively inexpensive ingredient in gasoline, but it has the highest vapor pressure at around 52 psi.

In a gasoline blend, each component contributes a fraction to the overall RVP. In the case of butane, if there is 10% butane in the blend, it will contribute around 5.2 psi (10% of 52 psi) to the overall blend. (In reality, it is slightly more complicated than this, because some components interact with each other which can affect the expected RVP). This means that in the summer, the butane fraction must be very low in the gasoline, or the overall RVP of the blend will be too high. That is the primary difference between winter and summer gasoline blends.

Why Prices Fall in the Fall

Winter gasoline blends are phased in as the weather gets cooler. September 15th is the date of the first increase in RVP, and in some areas the allowed RVP eventually increases to 15 psi. This has two implications for gasoline prices every fall. First, as noted, butane is a cheaper blending component than most of the other ingredients. That makes fall and winter gasoline cheaper to produce. But butane is also abundant, so that means that gasoline supplies effectively increase as the RVP requirement increases. Not only that, but this all takes place after summer driving season, when demand typically falls off.

These factors normally combine each year to reduce gasoline prices in the fall (even in non-election years). The RVP is stepped back down to summer levels starting in the spring, and this usually causes prices to increase. But lest you think of buying cheap winter gasoline and storing it until spring or summer, remember that it will pressure up as the weather heats up, and the contained butane will start to vaporize out of the mix.

And that's why gasoline prices generally fall back in the fall, and spring forward in the spring.

ED: This post originally ran September 15, 2006.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News
KEYWORDS: energy; energyfacts; gasprices; oil

1 posted on 09/26/2008 7:38:17 AM PDT by Mike Fieschko
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To: Mike Fieschko

The idea that we need different blends of unleaded vehicle fuel is in itself stupid. States need to be stripped of the power to mandate what types of fuel blends they can allow. The federal government should simply mandate the cleanest burning, most efficient blend of gasoline possible to be used everywhere at all times and we can allow for economies of scale to take their course.


2 posted on 09/26/2008 7:49:24 AM PDT by pnh102 (Save America - Ban Ethanol Now!)
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To: Mike Fieschko
Being uneducated in chemistry, why can't we simply have "regular" & "premium" (or 'high-test') gasoline?

I like the whole conversion to the new quiet, clean diesels that start up like gas engines, accelerate like gas engines and with the new soot catylists burn cleaner than gasoline...

Trucks use two types of fuel oil a number 1 in winnter and number 2 in summer (unless I'm backwards). Number 2 is thicker (I believe - one is thin and clear and the other is amber) and we use it in our furnaces because the thicker produces more BTUs per gallon.

VW is proving that diesel can be a quick start, quick get-go, quiet running and smokeless and get really high mileage. We can duplicate that I believe.

3 posted on 09/26/2008 7:52:09 AM PDT by KriegerGeist (I guess I'm now a "Bitter Clinger" to my guns and religion.)
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To: Mike Fieschko

So, is Diesel #2 blended differently for ambient temperature? Altitude?


4 posted on 09/26/2008 7:53:45 AM PDT by Paladin2 (Palin for President! (PUMA))
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To: Mike Fieschko

5 posted on 09/26/2008 7:54:08 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: Mike Fieschko

Excellent post - always wondered about this.

I can see the logic behind changing the volatility if you will of gas as the temperature changes, but the need for dozens of different boutique gasolines really escapes me. There has got to be a more sensible way of simplifying the system to balance the need to prevent evaporation with the need to maximize efficiency at our refineries which is a constrained resource.


6 posted on 09/26/2008 8:04:23 AM PDT by 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
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To: Paladin2
So, is Diesel #2 blended differently for ambient temperature?

I think that the answer is yes.

Altitude?

I don't know.
7 posted on 09/26/2008 8:06:58 AM PDT by Mike Fieschko (et numquam abrogatam)
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To: Geist Krieger
Being uneducated in chemistry, why can't we simply have "regular" & "premium" (or 'high-test') gasoline?

I think the major reason is air pollution limits.
8 posted on 09/26/2008 8:09:51 AM PDT by Mike Fieschko (et numquam abrogatam)
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To: pnh102

Ethanol endangers America?


9 posted on 09/26/2008 8:14:14 AM PDT by Impy (Spellcheck hates Obama, you should too.)
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To: Mike Fieschko
The reliance on a minimal number of refineries and pipelines, leave this country extremely vulnerable not just to natural events like hurricanes and earthquakes, but also to hostile acts.
10 posted on 09/26/2008 9:14:33 AM PDT by DannyTN
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To: pnh102

“The idea that we need different blends of unleaded vehicle fuel is in itself stupid. States need to be stripped of the power to mandate what types of fuel blends they can allow. The federal government should simply mandate the cleanest burning, most efficient blend of gasoline possible to be used everywhere at all times and we can allow for economies of scale to take their course.”

I agree.

There should also be zero ethanol content since the majority of cars can not use it due to the corrosive properties of ethanol in the fuel delivery systems of older vehicles.

Ethanol fuel can negatively affect electric fuel pumps by increasing internal wear, cause undesirable spark generation, and is not compatible with capacitance fuel level gauging indicators and may cause erroneous fuel quantity indications in vehicles that employ that system.

Then there is the fact that ethanol is nowhere as efficient as gasoline, and when ethanol is burned it releases a toxic chemical into the air that greatly increases ground level ozone.

Since the stations around me started offering the 10% ethanol blend gas, I’ve noticed a dramatic drop in fuel economy of my car among other problems.


11 posted on 09/26/2008 11:03:29 AM PDT by 2CAVTrooper (Democrats: Supporting America's enemies since 1824)
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