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Chicago jet fuel reaches $5 per gallon as refiner repairs add to the war-related surge in price

Chicago is now the most expensive jet fuel market in the United States, with prices exceeding $5 per gallon. This is due to the disruptions caused by the Iran War, combined with scheduled refinery maintenance, which has left a tight supply. The blockade of Iran's Strait of Hormuz - a major chokepoint for Middle Eastern oil exports - has caused energy prices to rise worldwide. This has forced airlines to raise fares and reduce capacity as a result of jet fuel shortages. GasBuddy analyst Patrick De Haan says the Chicago area is being hit by ongoing refinery maintenance, which has driven jet fuel prices up to $5 per gallon on the regional wholesale market. He said that before the Iran War, Chicago spot jet fuel traded for about $2.47 per gallon.

Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, one of the busiest in the world.

Other U.S. markets for spot jet fuel have seen a less dramatic rise in prices. New York Harbor jet 'fuel was $4.85 per gallon on Tuesday, up from $2.51 before the war. U.S. Gulf Coast jet fuel is now $4.86 per gallon, up from $2.39 prior to the conflict, De Haan reported.

Phillips 66's 356,000-barrel-per-day Wood River refinery in Illinois took its crude oil unit and some other parts of the refinery offline at the end of ?February for a 45-day maintenance period, industry monitor IIR Energy told .

IIR reported that Marathon Petroleum's 253,000 bpd Robinson Refinery in Illinois began scheduled maintenance?inmid-March. Units are expected to be offline until mid May.

The Midwest's refinery outages were the highest in all U.S. regions for the week ended April 3. Hillary Stevenson is vice president of energy intelligence at IIR.

GasBuddy's De Haan said that refinery problems are impacting the?supply of refined products and their pricing. Sharp increases in spot trading will be passed on to consumers soon.

Market participants reported that cash differentials for Chicago spot?diesel rose 25 cents per gallon on Tuesday to trade at a 5-cent premium to the benchmark ultra-low sulfur diesel. (Reporting from Shariq Khan, New York; editing done by David Gaffen.)

(source: Reuters)