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Hello — doesn’t it feel like a Monday? Consumer spending has been keeping the economy strong the last few years, but today the Chicago Fed gave us the latest sign that engine is slowing. We’ll tell you about that below, and how the Iran war figures into it. We’ll also visit an LA bicycle shop where riders can check out an e-bike like a book at a library.

The country is still dependent on fossil fuels, though prices can vary a lot from state to state — just look at California and Texas. My colleagues are paying $6 a gallon in Pasadena, California, so Marketplace’s  Elizabeth Trovall went to a Chevron refinery in Pasadena, Texas, to find out why the Lone Star State fills up cheaper. — Carrie Barber , newsletter editor 

P.S. Thanks to everyone who donated to our May fundraising drive! We can’t produce our daily radio shows or this newsletter without your support. If you didn’t get a chance to donate, you can still give here and get a great thank-you gift.
An ariel view of white oil storage containers alongside a river, with a vast blue sky overhead, dotted by fluffy clouds.
Brandon Bell/Getty Images
Why gas costs more in California than Texas
As refinery shutdowns and specialized fuel rules drive up California prices, Texas’ vast refining network and oil-friendly policies are helping keep gas costs lower.
At Chevron’s facility in Pasadena, Texas, around 125,000 barrels of West Texas crude oil are refined daily, heated to 600 degrees and sent into a silvery 20-story tower where fuels rise to different heights.

Lower down there’s diesel, toward the top is gasoline.

“Jet fuel is about two-thirds of the way up,” said facility manager Alun Phillips.

That jet fuel flows through a tube that looks like a small water slide wrapping around the tower. It heads through the plant to be further processed, and then sent on a pipeline that will help planes take off in cities like Atlanta and Philadelphia, as refined fuels are pricier and in short supply due to the global shortage of crude oil.

War in the Middle East has disrupted energy supply chains and laid bare the trade-offs of diverging energy policies in two of the biggest U.S. state economies: Texas and California.

In California, refineries are closing after years of limited investment amid stringent environmental regulations and state decarbonization goals, while oil production has dwindled. 

In Texas, oil production is at all-time highs and refining capacity is the strongest in the country.

“The average retail price in Texas right now is $4 a gallon for regular. In California it's $6.15 — quite a bit higher,” said Debnil Chowdhury, an analyst at S&P Global Energy, who filled up his blue Tacoma at a gas station about 25 miles west of the Pasadena refinery.

Fuel costs and refining look different here in Texas, compared to California for a few reasons, Chowdhury said.

For one, California uses its own special gasoline.

“They aren't allowed to use as much butane because of smog requirements,” he said. 

The state requires more expensive components and the use of specialized refineries. And California has much higher taxes on gas.

“Now, with the shutdown of two of the major refineries in California,” Chowdhury said, “they're more dependent on imports.”

Those imports come from Asia, which relies heavily on crude from the Strait of Hormuz.

“The distance is greater, so the logistical cost is also more expensive,” he said. “In Texas, the gasoline at this station probably came from 15 to 20 miles east of here at a refinery.”

But not all Californians are paying more to power their vehicles.

“Down the street there’s a Chevron station selling regular unleaded for $6.29 a gallon … but today I’m ‘filling up’ for free, actually,” said University of California, Davis, economist Matthew Zaragoza-Watkins from a California charging station. He charged up his electric vehicle at zero cost because of a deal for lifetime free charging when he bought the vehicle.

Even so, if he had paid the 34 cents a kilowatt-hour to charge from the California charging station, he estimates it would have cost him equivalent to about $2.25 a gallon — much cheaper than gasoline.

California is a leader in EV adoption. But the state’s regulatory policies and decarbonization goals, and other constraints, have contributed to shutdowns and higher fuel costs, now exacerbated by conflict in the Middle East.

“I think California, being on the forefront, is realizing that trying to move in a new direction involves a lot of constraints and trade-offs, which are not always the easiest to navigate,” Zaragoza-Watkins said. “It's not a great time, and I don't think it'll be a better time in the future.”
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Stocks hit new record highs today, apparently catching up with President Donald Trump’s claims yesterday that negotiations to end the Iran war were “proceeding nicely” — new strikes on Iran notwithstanding. The S&P 500 climbed 0.6% and the Nasdaq rallied 1.2%. The Dow dipped 0.2% from its own record.

  • BP shares dropped 3.8% today after the oil giant's board removed its chairman, reportedly for bullying behavior.

  • Speaking of oil, a barrel of Brent crude oil was $96.67 today, and a gallon of regular gas averaged $4.49.

  • Manufacturing is strong, according to the Chicago Fed’s National Activity Index, but spending is slowing down as high gas prices offset gains from last year’s tax cuts. 

Retail
  • Fast-fashion powerhouse Shein is buying Everlane, a clothing brand that made its name on sustainable, transparent manufacturing. Not exactly Shein’s bag. Everlane’s shocked millennial customers are asking: Why? Cash, a retail analyst told us.

  • Wholesale membership stores like Sam’s Club, BJ’s, and Costco are thriving in this turbulent economy because they’ve attracted wealthier customers, analysts told us. It makes sense when you realize buying in bulk means you have to spend in bulk too. 

Tech
  • Waymo has suspended service in six southern cities after its driverless cars plowed through flooded streets last week. Take a look. Waymo, owned by Google’s parent company Alphabet, said its cars can drive in heavy rain but it wants to improve service.  

  • Peptides are hot right now — GLP-1 weight loss drugs are peptides, and others promise to build muscle and improve skin — but not all are approved by the Food and Drug Administration. That could change this summer, and startups are banking on it.

  • Pope Leo XIV warned “artificial intelligence needs to be disarmed” and called for regulation in his first encyclical, a letter to Catholics. It created a split between Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and Vice President JD Vance, the highest-ranking Catholic in the Trump administration.

  • Like other tech companies, Uber is spending a lot on AI — it’s already blown through this year's budget and wants to spend more. But Chief Operating Officer Andrew Macdonald said the AI investment is getting harder to justify.   

  • After spending years and billions on a fruitless quest to create an electric car at Apple, legendary designer Jony Ive worked on Ferrari’s first ever EV, revealed last night. The Luce will set you back $640,000, and its look is a bit Apple-esque.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“They get a bike, they get a helmet, they get a lock, and they get training on how to ride safely in the streets. That's helped sustain the shop.”
— Adé Neff, owner of Ride On! Bike Co-Op in Leimert Park, Los Angeles
Business has been tight for Neff’s bike shop. Tariffs and fluctuating bicycle supply, a problem since the early days of COVID-19, aren’t helping either. But business is turning around for Ride On!, thanks to a grant for an e-bike loan program. Neff told us how he’s helping the community in our latest installment of our series “My Economy,” sponsored by Intuit Quickbooks.
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A can of salmon with the lid mostly pulled back, revealing the reddish meat inside. The can sits on dark wood, with a fork underneath it.
intek1/Getty Images
Final note
Canned sockeye salmon is getting pricier — if you can find it
We discovered why.
 
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