The price of petrol at the pump across Australia fell by an average of 13.3 cents a liter from its record high last week, but diesel prices continued to rise.
The Australian Institute of Petroleum (AIP) reports the national average price of petrol for the week ending Easter Sunday (April 5) was 240.1 cpl, compared to 253.4 cpl the previous week.
In the capital cities, the average petrol price fell by 14.9 cpl, from a record 252.9 cpl to 238.3 cpl.
The decline follows the federal government’s cut in fuel excise tax, which came into effect on April 1, reducing the tax by 26.3cpl. A further reduction of 5.7 cpl was announced by states and territories on April 2nd.
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However, diesel prices have continued to rise. The national average increased from 310.0 cpl to 312.7 cpl during the same period.
In metropolitan areas, diesel prices increased by 1.6 cpl to 310.3 cpl, while regional areas saw a larger increase of 3.5 cpl, increasing the national regional average to 314.6 cpl.
The federal government has also suspended the heavy vehicle road toll – previously 32.4 cpl – for vehicles with a maximum permissible mass (GVM) over 4.5 tonnes until June 30, 2026.
Fuel availability has improved, with the number of filling stations without petrol or diesel falling from more than 800 to fewer than 600 in the past week The Guardian.
Federal Energy Minister Chris Bowen said 3.4 per cent of petrol stations across the country were out of diesel, including 142 sites in New South Wales, 51 in Victoria and 38 in Queensland.
I’ll keep talking ABC News Breakfast Today, Attorney-General Michelle Rowland said Australia currently has 39 days of petrol, 29 days of diesel and 30 days of kerosene in reserve.
Asked if fuel rationing was being considered, she said: “We’re not thinking about it.”
“Our focus is on supply. We previously had security of supply until April. This has now been extended until May. We continue to work with our international partners, including Singapore and Japan, to ensure these supplies continue to arrive.”
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