U.S. diesel price falls 3.9 cents, $2.327

user-gravatar Headshot

Continuing its slide of recent weeks, the national average retail price of a gallon of diesel fell 3.9 cents to $2.327 for the week ending Monday, Dec. 29. The price is the lowest since June 20, 2005, when it was $2.313.

The price has fallen $2.437 after hitting a record high of $4.764 on July 14. This week’s price is $1.018 less less than the same week last year, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.

All regions tracked by DOE saw price declines. The largest retreat by region, 5.1 cents, was found in two regions: New England, where week-over-week prices declined to $2.638, the nation’s most expensive diesel by region; and the Lower Atlantic, where week-over-week prices declined to $2.355. The smallest decline by region, 0.1 cents, was found on the West Coast, where week-over-week prices fell to $2.273. The nation’s least expensive diesel by region, $2.250, was found in the Rocky Mountains, where week-over-week prices declined 2.2 cents.

California, which DOE tracks separately for its weekly update, saw an 1.0-cent price decline to $2.241; that price is $1.250 cheaper than last year. For state-by-state diesel prices, updated daily, click here.