Header Ad Module

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Petrol stories from both sides of the Tasman

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Petrol stories from both sides of the Tasman

    Petrol rises 'too much, too soon'

    4:00 AM Saturday Jan 16, 2010
    Gull says it has no plans to raise its prices. Photo / Supplied


    Pressure is on the big oil companies to reverse their latest price rises after industry small fry Gull announced yesterday it had no intention of following them upwards.
    Automobile Association senior analyst Mark Stockdale said increases imposed by the four big companies on Tuesday of 6c a litre for petrol and 4c for diesel were unjustified and should be rescinded.
    He endorsed Gull's decision to hold the line after an easing of fuel import costs since Tuesday, and said the big suppliers should have waited before raising their prices for their second time in two weeks.
    Their latest increases followed rises last week of 4c for petrol and 2c for diesel, after a stable period in which the companies absorbed cost increases and held their prices over the Christmas-New Year break.
    That has meant an increase of 10c a litre on petrol and 6c on diesel since early last week.
    Mr Stockdale acknowledged that the suppliers had shown goodwill to motorists over Christmas in the face of rising import costs, but said Tuesday's increases were "too much and too soon" after last week's rises, and noted that the New Zealand dollar remained firm against the US greenback.
    "We would have expected the oil companies to have waited until later this week to see whether or not that [import cost] increase was sustained.
    "As Gull has shown, that increase has not been sustained - it has actually come back - so with hindsight the oil companies should not have moved that much."
    Mr Stockdale said the New Zealand dollar had also risen from 71c to 74c against the greenback since before Christmas, increasing this country's fuel-purchasing power.
    "The AA is encouraging the oil companies to review their prices in light of the [cost] reductions this week and the high dollar, and to bring the price back by several cents to reflect current international costs."
    Gull New Zealand general manager Dave Bodger said international prices had fallen significantly in the past few days and his company's policy was "not to knee-jerk and extract profit from the customer".
    He acknowledged that world oil prices rose by about US$10 ($13.50) a barrel since the week before Christmas to a peak of US$92 ($124.50) by Tuesday for refined petrol and diesel.
    But he said prices had since eased by US$4 ($5.42c) for diesel and US$2 ($2.71c) for petrol.
    Gull's decision not to increase its prices left most of its regular petrol and diesel 7c a litre cheaper than those of its competitors, and its biofuel 9c below the mark. The big oil companies - BP, Mobil, Caltex and Shell - remained at 175.9c a litre for 91-octane petrol and 113.9c for diesel at most main centre pumps last night.
    Shell spokeswoman Jackie Maitland, whose company is generally the first of the big players to reduce prices, said last night that the cost to it of refined fuel had increased by 9 per cent since Christmas Day.
    Shell had managed to absorb its costs over the holiday period, before being forced to increase its prices on Tuesday last week, the first business day of 2010.
    Ms Maitland would not indicate whether Shell might reverse this week's increases, other than to say the company reviewed its prices daily.
    Mobil spokesman Alan Bailey said that although his firm aimed to be competitive at all times, it never flagged its intentions before moving prices.
    Spokeswomen for the two other oil majors, BP and Caltex, could not be contacted.
    MAJOR PRICES (per litre)
    Petrol (91 octane) Today - $1.76 Six months ago - $1.68 12 months ago - $1.36
    Diesel Today - $1.14 Six months ago - $1.07 12 months ago - $1.04
    Pressure is on the big oil companies to reverse their latest price rises after Gull announced it had no intention of following them.
    "There's one way to find out if a man is honest-ask him. If he says 'yes,' you know he is a crook." Groucho Marx

  • #2
    Petrol price to hit $1.50


    Article from:
    By Ursula Heger
    January 16, 2010 12:00am

    PETROL is tipped to reach $1.50 a litre later this year as Queensland's motorists battle some of the highest prices in the country.
    While prices are expected to dip slightly in the next few weeks, economists said prices at the pump were set to bounce later this year.
    CommSec chief economist Craig James said the price of unleaded fuel had jumped 6¢ a litre to about $1.25 a litre in recent weeks because an extended cold snap in Europe had pushed up demand.
    He said by the end of the year motorists could expect pump prices to peak at about $1.50 a litre at the top of the weekly price cycle.
    "(It won't be) the record highs that we saw almost two years ago, but certainly motorists should be banking on an average price in the order of $1.35 by the end of the year," he said.
    "(During) the expensive days of the discounting cycle it could be pushing up to $1.45, probably up towards the $1.50 mark."
    Brisbane last month recorded one of the highest prices for fuel in the country, with the average cost of unleaded reaching $122.5 a litre – higher than both Sydney and Melbourne. Hobart and Canberra were the only capitals with a higher average unleaded petrol price.
    Mr Craig's warning came as the state Opposition accused the Bligh Government of not being proactive about policing petrol price gouging.
    A reply to an Opposition question on notice revealed that 96 complaints about unleaded prices had been made to the Government since the 8.3¢-a-litre fuel subsidy was axed in July last year but no companies had been prosecuted.
    "Ms Bligh has failed to provide the resources to track down petrol stations doing the wrong thing despite promising to pull out all stops," LNP leader John-Paul Langbroek said. "Ms Bligh needs to explain whether she ever intended to ensure petrol prices were properly monitored or whether because the State Government is so ridden with debt that she can't afford to keep her word."
    After the subsidy was axed, the Government had promised to "name and shame" service stations caught jacking up prices.
    While the "name and shaming" applied only for 48 hours, Fair Trading Minister Peter Lawlor said a weekly report was compiled for the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.
    Five service stations, including four BP stations at Toowoomba and a Caltex service station at Southport, had been referred to the ACCC.
    "The Office of Fair Trading has a role to play under the Fair Trading Act in relation to deceptive and misleading practices associated with the provision of goods or services."
    "There's one way to find out if a man is honest-ask him. If he says 'yes,' you know he is a crook." Groucho Marx

    Comment

    Working...
    X