The pandemic and international conflict are being blamed for Australia’s soaring petrol prices as hundreds of pumps begin to charge more than $2 a litre.
The insight comes amid hugely fluctuating fuel costs since Covid’s arrival, due to supply chain issues and people’s behaviour changing.
Prices initially bottomed out in the first wave when punters could expect to pay just 84 cents per litre.
CEO of the Australasian Convenience and Petroleum Marketers Association, Mark McKenzie said cost it largely dependent on the wholesale price.
“The story here is linked to the wholesale price, which is linked to the global markets,” he told 3AW
“The wholesale price at the moment is $1.79 which is what petrol stations pay for the fuel to be delivered to their site.
“Then you add their retail costs, all the costs associated with their lease, their business costs and the small margin that sits on that.”
“The price you and I pay at the pump is 85 per cent dependent on the wholesale price and 15 per cent on the retail price.”
Mr McKenzie also explained how the standard price had more than doubled since the start of the pandemic.
“That’s largely due to the fact that I can’t turn a refinery off and on like a light switch,” he said.
“I have to wind it up and wind it down, so all the global fuel refiners are being quite cautious in predicting how fast economies will recover, and they’re getting it consistently wrong, which is effectively putting this price up.”
He also said the Russia-Ukraine conflict had caused prices to hike by a further 20 per cent since December.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison also weighed in on the matter, insisting that soaring prices are temporary.
“What the advice we’re getting particularly out of the International Energy Agency and its impact is likely to be short term, it’s likely to be temporary,” he told the ABC
“Now you don’t go and completely recalibrate your budget based on fluctuations in oil prices, they’ve gone up, they’ve gone down. And so we’d need to assess what the longer term impact would be.”