Gas prices could decline following Monday's plunge in oil prices and gas futures. But the extent of the damage from Hurricane Gustav remains to be seen.
The U.S. Department of Energy said Monday that 12 refineries have shut down and 10 have reduced their output.
"If there's no damage to refineries and they're able to get back up relatively quickly, we would assume gas prices would continue the downward trend that we've seen over the last few weeks," said Doug MacIntyre, senior oil market analyst at the Energy Information Administration, on Monday.
As Gustav made landfall on the Louisiana coast on Monday, oil prices plummeted by $4.58 a barrel to $110.88 in electronic trading just after 1:00 p.m. ET, while gas futures in the wholesale market fell more than 11 cents to $2.74 a gallon. Also on Monday, the nationwide average for retail gas prices slipped slightly, by one tenth of a cent, to $3.686 a gallon, according to the motorist group AAA.
Peter Beutel, an analyst with energy risk management firm Cameron Hanover, expects gas prices to stay flat or fall based on the recent decline in oil prices and gas futures. But he cautioned that it's too early to tell what retail gas prices will do until the full extent of the storm's damage on oil production in the Gulf of Mexico is known.
"I'm surprised at this strong decline [in oil prices] before we even know what the damage is from the hurricane," said Beutel.
Kenneth Medlock, energy fellow at Rice University in Houston, said it will take several days before the effects of Gustav will be felt on gas prices.
After Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans in 2005, three days passed before gas prices spiked 10 cents a gallon in a single day. Within one week of Katrina's landfall on Aug. 29, gas prices had surged by 45 cents to $3.05 a gallon nationwide.
"If one or two refineries have any damage [from Gustav], gasoline prices will start to move up, no matter what oil prices do," said Medlock.
On Monday, gas prices rose in the Gulf Coast states of Louisiana, Texas, Florida, Mississippi and Alabama, according to AAA, trumping the national average, though the rate of increase was lower than in previous days. Attempts to contact gas stations in coastal Mississippi and Louisiana were unsuccessful, and they have presumably been evacuated.
The price of unleaded gas has been declining steadily since hitting a nationwide record of $4.114 a gallon on July 17. But that trend broke last week as Hurricane Gustav gathered strength and moved toward the Gulf Coast.
The nationwide average for retail gas prices rose about 3 cents a gallon over the three days ending on Sunday, according to AAA. Gas prices rose dramatically in certain areas of the Gulf Coast, like the Mississippi cities of Biloxi, Gulfport and Pascagoula, where they jumped bymore than 9 cents a gallon on Friday, according to AAA.