Here ‘s the chart for Toronto since you are incapable of opening a link by yourselves and using chart filters.
You obviously never graduated high school because you don’t compare a spot price (one point in time to averages from years past. You compare there averages to the same period averages from years past. Then you are supposed to analyze and adjust for things like supply and demand. When demand outstrips supply prices go up (high school economics). The economy is recovering so demand goes up. Some people avoid s public transit because of Covid so they drive and demand goes up. OPEC controls supply and they haven’t increased it to keep prices high to recovery what they lost last year. The power outages in Texas hurt supply and supply went down.
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You came so close, but couldn’t do it. You forgot a significant change on January 20th. But I guess that has absolutely nothing to do with the prices changing shortly thereafter.
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