Petrol prices: ‘Unavoidable rush’ expected at pump

Energy Minister Megan Woods' office says she has not decided on a tax cut extension, but is monitoring petrol costs. Photo: RNZ / Dan Cook.

An Automobile Association advisor says the end of fuel tax relief will see chaos at the pumps.

The government cut petrol taxes by 25 cents per litre in March as prices spiked.

Initially, it was a three-month measure, but was extended another two months in Budget 2022, and is due to end on August 15.

Pump prices are averaging just over $3 per litre for Unleaded 91 on Thursday, according to price tracking website Gaspy.

Automobile Association principal policy advisor Terry Collins says there will be an "unavoidable rush" when the 25 cents extra tax came back.

"This has got to be a difficult one for the government - if it goes on in one lump then we can expect to have queues at the service stations, and we expect that some of them may run dry.

"It's difficult for those oil companies to fill them [pumps] up quickly, because they've only got a limited amount of trucks and tankers to do that, and if it happened nationwide, that would put a strain on their logistics."

Energy Minister Megan Woods' office says she has not decided on a tax cut extension, but is monitoring petrol costs.

Brent crude oil prices settled below US$100 a barrel on Wednesday for the first time in three months, and two days in a row on Thursday, for the first time in four months.

Collins says the market is currently "very volatile".

"Oil is a market where it has a lot of investors and basically gamblers who bet that the price of oil will be at a particular price sometime in the future," he says.

"A lot of those people have started selling very quickly, because they're worried that there will be a recession and that the price of oil will drop. However, the demand has still been fairly consistent, and rather high, and supply is still tight."

Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment data shows the lowest petrol prices so far this year were in the first week of January when the average was $2.61 per litre for Unleaded 91 at pumps.

Collins doubts the average price of 91 petrol would fall below $2.90 per litre for the rest of this year.

"There are still very high refining costs, very high shipping costs, it's very difficult to get tankers to move the product, and the exchange rate is rather low."

University of Auckland Business School emeritus professor Basil Sharp says it could take weeks for Brent crude prices to affect what New Zealand consumers paid.

"The supply chain is just a cascading series of contracts, going right back to the producers of oil coming out of the ground, and so it takes time for that to work its way out."

The average New Zealand household spends 4.5 per cent of income on petrol, according to Stats NZ.

Tough for motorists

Gull general manager Dave Bodger says his company's petrol stations will be moving prices down as soon as they can, depending on where international refined oil prices go.

"I know what it feels like to be sitting there balancing your budget... and all of a sudden you're spending $30 a week more on petrol and diesel just to get yourself to work. It's tough. We will do what we can."

He appreciates that it's expensive for the government to keep the fuel tax cut going, but it's well received by motorists, he says.

-RNZ/Sam Olley.

2 comments

Time

Posted on 15-07-2022 07:44 | By Kancho

Ideally the government will extend the reduction in the tax take longer or at least phase in over months. After all the tax take on food and most everything else has gone up substantially with the higher GST take. Many countries have lower tax and not on food which hits hard on poverty, children, etc. Seems the government has plenty of money but sadly poor priorities


daizy

Posted on 15-07-2022 17:18 | By Davy

NZ has oil refinery let's use it


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