Fuel Prices Are About To Surge, Yet Americans Continue To Buy Trucks In Record Numbers

Pickup trucks and big SUVs are still kings in the USA, despite lackluster improvements in fuel economy. Apparently a few months of cheap petrol is all it takes for people to forget a global financial collapse and six years of recovery
Fuel Prices Are About To Surge, Yet Americans Continue To Buy Trucks In Record Numbers

The year was 2008. I was working in a call center in Southeast Michigan helping auto insurance adjusters figure out how much wrecked cars were worth. I’d recently left a position working with the performance division at Ford because, well, everyone was leaving. The way things were going with all the auto companies at that time, I figured switching to the insurance side would be recession-proof. After all, no matter how bad things get, people still crash. Right?

Long story short, it wasn’t recession-proof. But I did survive the auto industry collapse and global financial meltdown living just 40 miles from ground zero - AKA Detroit, Michigan. I was lucky; in that part of the country there were business executives with 20 years of experience and multiple college degrees fighting for jobs at Wal-Mart. Engineers who could rewire the International Space Station couldn’t get jobs flipping burgers at McDonalds.

Many of them were also saddled with pickup trucks or massive luxury SUVs.

2017 GMC Yukon XL Denal 4WD, 6.2-litre V8. 16 MPG combined rating. MSRP $71,000 (approx)
2017 GMC Yukon XL Denal 4WD, 6.2-litre V8. 16 MPG combined rating. MSRP …

I’m not against such vehicles, and with a rather inefficient V8 car sitting in my garage right now, I’d be a gigantic hypocrite if I said people shouldn’t buy them. But my Mustang isn’t a daily driver, and at 1/20th the cost of that GMC Yukon, I can easily afford something else that’s a bit more frugal. Most truck and SUV buyers don’t take that extra step; they look for the snazziest model they can afford and plunge into it without considering what would happen if petrol prices double or triple.

The bigger-is-better mentality with nary a concern for economy in this day and age is where I facepalm, because we should’ve learned a serious lesson by now. This is how so many people lost their shirts a few years back, not to mention their vehicles and homes. And it’s how General Motors - once the largest auto manufacturer in the world - went bankrupt.

And my spider sense tells me it’ll be happening again, in the not-so-distant future. More on that in a moment.

I know - us Americans are crybabies when it comes to petrol because Europe pays far more than we do. Europe also has a wide range of vehicles that do 50mpg, whereas we are still stuck in the 30mpg range, save for a few hybrids. It all balances out, but more importantly, Europeans buy those efficient diesel hatchbacks because most are pretty decent cars, and you know, they don’t want to spend all of their money on petrol driving to the pub.

Here in the States, when petrol topped $4.00 a gallon many people didn’t get that memo. They kept right on driving their 15mpg pickup trucks to the pub, to work, to the mall, anywhere they wanted to go until their bank accounts and credit cards literally disintegrated. Once they realised something needed to change it was too late. People were broke, and because their trucks drank more fuel than a Eurofighter in full afterburner, they were virtually worthless.

2017 Ford F-150 King Ranch 4WD, 3.5 EcoBoost V6. 16 MPG combined rating. MSRP $55,000 (approx)
2017 Ford F-150 King Ranch 4WD, 3.5 EcoBoost V6. 16 MPG combined rating…

I clearly remember talking to an auto insurance adjuster during my time at the call center. It was September 2008 and Hurricane Ike had just hit the Texas gulf coast. The adjuster had several total loss claims from the area; people couldn’t afford to drive their pickups and SUVs, nor could they sell them because nobody wanted to buy them. So they just drove them to the beach before the storm hit, and let Ike’s storm surge do the rest. They failed to realise insurance payouts were based on current values anyway, so I suspect many people were still left owing money on vehicles they no longer had.

Today, pickup trucks and SUVs in the US have grown bigger than ever, and American buyers are right back to soaking them up. And it’s not as if they suddenly became fuel misers either - despite hype from manufacturers about “60 percent better fuel economy” they all still suck. Literally. A 2016 GMC Yukon still gets 16mpg. The best pickups or big SUVs might reach 20.

Americans bought a record 17.4 million cars last year, eclipsing the previous record set in 2000. So far this year overall sales are down by roughly eight percent, but large SUVs, crossovers and pickup truck sales are actually up quite a bit. Petrol in the States has been between $2.00 and $2.50 for most of the year, which is certainly encouraging people to go right back to loving their big, thirsty, do-all workhorses.

2017 Dodge Durango Citadel AWD, 3.6-litre V6. 20 MPG combined rating. MSRP $41,000. (approx)
2017 Dodge Durango Citadel AWD, 3.6-litre V6. 20 MPG combined rating. MSRP…

I can’t fault manufacturers for building the vehicles people want to buy, nor can I call out people for making purchases from the heart. If you want a big pickup and can afford it, do it. I won’t lie - pickups and SUVs are pretty damn nice these days. But you better have a plan when (yes when) energy prices go back into the stratosphere. Because that new 18mpg off-roader that never goes off-road will get crazy expensive quicker than you can say government bailout.

Oh how quickly people forget, but if petrol prices double in the next couple years - and I believe they will - people will quickly and tragically remember. How do I know this will happen? Well, let’s take a look at current events.

OPEC just announced a cut in oil production, the first such deal since 2008. Prior to that, US auto sales had been strong - record-level strong - led by pickup trucks and SUVs taking advantage of low petrol prices in the States.

Fuel Prices Are About To Surge, Yet Americans Continue To Buy Trucks In Record Numbers

Maybe I’m being pessimistic. Maybe this time the crash won’t be quite so bad. The auto market in the US is more diverse with small, efficient alternatives to trucks and big SUVs that are legitimately good. And since 2008 there’s been quite an expansion in shale oil production in the States, and when oil tops $50 a barrel that production will likely ramp back up. Maybe people will be smarter this time. Maybe there won’t be another crash at all.

Or maybe in a couple years we’ll see more Yukons, F-150s and Durangos parked along the Southern U.S. coastline, waiting for the storm surge to roll in.

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Comments

Anonymous

I run my car on nothing but E85 and even as the market crashed hard, I still found myself paying under $3 a gallon for it. I personally pay now under $1.50 a gallon here in Texas for E85, for about a year now, I have noticed the shifts in price within the last few months, but as the prices dropped I did not go out and look for a big Merican engine. The market is inherently unpredictable and I am far from oblivious when it comes to market changes. Most of us with some common sense will prices will stabilize and likely climb back to the $3 dollar days here. But what this article does not calculate for is a relative lower cost of living here. Especially in Texas. While some will feel the sting, most will carry on.

That being said, if you are in California. I am so sorry lol.

10/03/2016 - 16:04 |
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Carter (FirebirdSquad)

Fuel prices won’t “surge” if we keep fracking for oil. It wasn’t long ago when a barrel of oil was cheaper than a bucket of chicken. And it’s only gonna get better if we produce more of our own oil.

10/04/2016 - 01:24 |
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Marco André

Are Americans really that lucky that they pay so much less for gas? Like, seriously, it seems that if you wanna go to your nearest Wall-mart you need an hour’s worth of driving, back here in Portugal, it’ll be far if you have to drive 10 minutes. Of course, other factors way in on the price of gas, but IMO the biggest factor is the actual distance you have to drive if you wanna go somewhere. Where in a place like Europe a 10 minute drive will probably get you through 5/6 villages, most containing some basic form of bank and supermarket, in the states you’d be happy if you reached half a small town and drove through a Wall-mart. This means that you’ll have to spend much more gas to reach necessity places, if prices on both countries were the same, it wouldn’t be fair.

So how can they make gas so cheap in the states and so expensive in Europe? Easy, taxes. Portugal fuel is so heavily taxed, that before taxes, it costs less than half. Petrol is currently at 1,50€ a litter, before taxes, it costs something around 0,70€ (and that’s when petrol prices are high), in the start of the year, when petrol was around an 1,40€, before taxes it cost ~0,62€.

Now, if you consider that Portugal is a small country, it makes sense that gas is so expensive, right? Well, not in our case, because our average income is much less than what you get in the rest of Europe. We pay much more for basic comodities and such, so yeah everything is seriously f*cked. Also, it does not help that diesel is the reigning fuel, aided by the fact that it’s at least 0,25€ cheaper than petrol. So basically, if you like petrol and cars, dont come to Portugal, or your wallet will literally disintegrate.

10/27/2016 - 19:50 |
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Fuel Prices Are About To Surge, Yet Americans Continue To Buy Trucks In Record Numbers
Straight6Unicorn95

Whenever I see a big Pickup Truck thing that clearly never has been used as a work horse I just think: freaking douche and wish him all the worst. There’s a reason the average US citizen almost produces double the CO² as some German dude. Just under triple of Denmark’s figure and almost 2.5 times the UK value. Whats the advantage anyway??? You can’t park anywhere, terrible braking and high speed performance, massive tire wear, horrid insurance costs, bad crash safety, sucky cornering performance and will struggle with many areas in Germany where roads are slim. Actually looking at the US i always notice how their roads are nearly twice the width per lane. So wasteful, should be ashamed.

10/28/2016 - 20:58 |
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I don’t get though, how bad people must be at budgeting when those low fuel prices could be a problem if doubled. You pay nearly 1/3 of EU prices. If it doubles you still pay just 2/3. In EU we pay like 5,5$ per gallon. If you drive so far every month, that doubling your gasoline bill would cripple your personal finances, shouldn’t you be driving a smaller more economic car in the first place anyway??? Nobody in their right mind would permanently live in a way where you financial leeway is almost fully exhausted just if you had to double your silly gas payments. Specially when its so easy to buy a car with double the mpg.

10/28/2016 - 21:13 |
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