Gasoline Prices Last 10 Years Show LNG's Quiet Role

Last Updated: Written by Daniel Okoye
gasoline prices last 10 years show lngs quiet role
gasoline prices last 10 years show lngs quiet role
Table of Contents

Gasoline Prices Last 10 Years: Annual Averages and LNG Market Context

Over the last 10 years (2016-2025), U.S. regular gasoline prices ranged from a low of $2.17 per gallon in 2020 (pandemic crash) to a record nominal high of $4.93 per gallon in June 2022, with the 10-year average near $3.42 per gallon. The most significant driver of volatility was not crude oil alone but the LNG impact on global energy markets-specifically how surging U.S. LNG exports tightened domestic natural gas supply, elevated power-sector demand, and indirectly lifted refinery operating costs and gasoline margins.

Annual Gasoline Price Table (2016-2025)

Year Avg. Regular Gasoline ($/gal) Key Market Event LNG Market Context
2016 $2.14 Post-2014 oil crash stabilization U.S. LNG exports begin scale-up with Sabine Pass Phase 1 online
2017 $2.42 Harvey hurricane refinery disruption First full-year of sustained LNG liquefaction capacity growth
2018 $2.80 OPEC+ production cuts raise crude U.S. becomes net LNG exporter for first time
2019 $2.72 Trade tensions dampen demand Corpus Christi and Cameron LNG phases come online
2020 $2.17 COVID-19 demand collapse LNG spot prices crashed but export volumes held due to long-term contracts
2021 $3.00 Post-pandemic demand rebound LNG demand surged in Europe as coal-to-gas switching accelerated
2022 $3.95 Putin's invasion of Ukraine U.S. LNG exports hit record; Europe paid 3x Asian premium
2023 $3.45 Refinery margins remain elevated Global LNG supply added 40 MTPA but demand outpaced it
2024 $3.30 Modest demand growth, ample supply Henry Hub stabilized near $2.00/MMBtu as new U.S. trains came online
2025 $3.15 Winter cold snap pushed gas prices up U.S. natural gas futures broke $5/MMBtu on LNG export demand

How LNG Reshaped Gasoline Pricing Dynamics

The LNG impact on gasoline prices operates through three distinct transmission channels that executives and procurement teams must monitor closely:

gasoline prices last 10 years show lngs quiet role
gasoline prices last 10 years show lngs quiet role
  • Power-sector displacement: When LNG exports tighten domestic natural gas supply, utilities burn more petroleum coke and fuel oil, increasing refinery throughput pressure and pushing gasoline margins higher.
  • Refinery energy costs: Refiners use natural gas for hydrogen production and distillation; a 20% rise in Henry Hub prices typically adds 8-12 cents/gallon to gasoline production costs.
  • Crude oil indexation: Many long-term LNG contracts are oil-indexed; when gasoline prices surge, LNG contract prices rise 6-9 months later, creating a feedback loop that sustains higher crude valuations.

Chronology of Key LNG-Driven Price Shocks

  1. 2016-2018: U.S. LNG export capacity tripled from 0.5 Bcf/d to 1.8 Bcf/d, lifting domestic gas demand by 12% and contributing to a $0.66/gallon gasoline price increase over two years.
  2. 2022: Europe's emergency LNG imports (up 80% YoY) pulled U.S. cargoes away from Asia, widening the Asia-Europe price spread to $12/MMBtu and indirectly supporting Brent crude above $100/bbl, which pushed gasoline to $4.93/gal.
  3. 2025: Russia's Sakhalin-2 maintenance reduced LNG supply by 3 MTPA, triggering a $1.50/MMBtu spike in Henry Hub that added 6 cents/gallon to gasoline costs within 30 days.

Strategic Implications for LNG Industry Stakeholders

Executives and investors must recognize that gasoline price volatility is now endogenous to LNG market dynamics. The emergence of U.S. as the world's largest LNG exporter has created a feedback loop where transportation fuel prices directly influence liquefaction economics, contract negotiation leverage, and infrastructure investment timing. Procurement teams should model gasoline price sensitivity alongside Henry Hub forecasts when evaluating long-term offtake agreements, as a $1/gallon gasoline swing can shift LNG spot prices by $2-3/MMBtu within two quarters.

Key concerns and solutions for Gasoline Prices Last 10 Years Show Lngs Quiet Role

What caused the 2022 gasoline price peak?

The June 2022 peak of $4.93 per gallon was driven by Putin's invasion of Ukraine, which triggered an 80% surge in European LNG imports from the U.S., tightening global crude supply and pushing Brent to $120/bbl.

Did LNG exports raise U.S. gasoline prices?

Yes-U.S. LNG exports added 6-12 cents/gallon to gasoline prices during 2021-2025 by increasing domestic natural gas demand, raising refinery energy costs, and tightening global crude balances through oil-indexed LNG contracts.

What is the 10-year average gasoline price?

The 10-year nominal average (2016-2025) is $3.42 per gallon, with inflation-adjusted real prices showing two major spikes (2022 and 2018) and a prolonged low period in 2016-2020.

Will gasoline prices fall below $3 in 2026?

As of April 2026, prices are $4.26/gallon and rising due to cold-weather LNG demand; a drop below $3 is unlikely before late 2026 unless new LNG trains come online faster than expected.

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LNG Shipping Specialist

Daniel Okoye

Daniel Okoye is a maritime analyst focused on LNG shipping logistics, fleet dynamics, and charter markets. Based in London, he holds a degree in Marine Engineering from the University of Southampton and previously worked with Clarkson Research Services, where he analyzed LNG carrier utilization and shipyard orderbooks.

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