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Chevron CEO warns Trump’s oil crisis could get even worse

Chevron CEO warns Trump’s oil crisis could get even worse

Chevron’s CEO has warned that he isn’t sure howhigh gas prices could get as Donald Trump continues to try to bring an end to thetwo-month-long Iran war.

The Independent US

Mike Wirth was interviewed on CBS’sFace the Nationon Sunday and said that the war had exposed the relative futility of some measures taken to avert price shocks for consumers while warning that gas prices were not done rising, at least for now.

Gas prices are nationally averaged at $4.46 for a gallon of low-grade fuel. Wirth said it was “very hard to say” that gas prices had peaked, as some administration officials have hurriedly insistedover the past month. Now,negotiations over a ceasefire deal have collapsedand Iran’s grip over the Strait of Hormuz has so far proved impossible for the U.S. to shake loose.

Wirth added to CBS’s Margaret Brennan that there were a number of “upward pressures” on gas prices, including the continued supply problems exacerbated by the strait’s closure, and said that prices were reaching the point where the market risks a severe drop in demand for fuel, further increasing volatility in the economy and making things worse for consumers throughout different sectors of goods and services.

“The shock absorbers are being drained out of the system, which means there's this upward pressure on price, because supply is getting tighter and the ability to resupply is getting more difficult, and that increases the likelihood of volatility,” said Wirth.

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Chevron’s CEO said on Sunday that jet fuel prices will continue to rise and it’s ‘very hard to say’ whether gasoline prices will come down soon (AFP/Getty)

He added that jet fuel, where price hikes are now being blamed for suddenly pushing the long-struggling budget airline Spirit out of business, is likely to keep rising in price over the summer months. The rising costs could cause many families to scale back or cancel summer vacations altogether. Still, an annual global travel survey conducted in April found that 51 percent of Americansplan to take some formof international travel this summer.

"It’s not flowing today. So, we are seeing jet fuel tighten very quickly in Europe, in Asia, and we’re seeing airlines announce adjustments in their flight schedules," Wirth said. "I think aviation is clearly an area where it’s going to probably get worse over the next few weeks."

Two in three Americans blame Donald Trump for high gas prices (Reuters)

AWashington Post/ABC News/Ipsos pollreleased last week found that more than four in ten Americans say they are driving less to conserve fuel and cutting household costs amid the crisis, and more than a third have already dialed back some summer vacation plans.

And nearly two-thirdsblame Trump in particularfor the crisis, according to a Quinnipiac poll.

Even as most senior Cabinet officials have backed away from predictions that the war will end soon, White House press officials and the president himself remain adamant that the administration can reach pre-Biden fuel cost levels before the end of Trump’s term.

“The President brought oil and gas prices down to multiyear lows at record speed, and as traffic in the Strait of Hormuz normalizes, these energy prices will plummet once again,” a White House spokesperson told thePostthis week.