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More petrol pump pain on way as oil hits 8-year high

Australian motorists face even higher petrol prices as Russia’s escalation of war in Ukraine makes oil more expensive, economists say.

Mar 01, 2022, updated Mar 01, 2022

Uncertainty about the outlook for global energy markets saw oil prices peak at eight-year highs over the weekend, before dipping slightly to just under $US100 a barrel ($143) on Monday.

It threatens to worsen an already record-breaking bowser squeeze in Australia, with petrol prices reaching fresh highs last week and climbing further across Adelaide and other capital cities.

Commonwealth Bank’s head of economics Gareth Aird warned higher petrol prices will be the key way Australians feel the war in their wallets.

“Higher energy prices will boost export revenue and national income, while an expected increase in oil prices means higher petrol prices and further upward pressure on headline inflation,” he said.

But efforts to ease oil prices may be on the way, with both the US and OPEC nations this week mulling whether to put extra supply onto the global market, a move that could protect motorists from the worst.

Australian petrol prices already climbing

For most Australian motorists, rising petrol prices are already squeezing the weekly budget.

Australia’s national average petrol price climbed to 180.6 cents per litre (cpl) last week, according to the Australian Institute of Petroleum – 16.8 per cent higher than the 12-month average.

And petrol prices have continued rising since; MotorMouth data finds Adelaide hit an average of 183.8 cpl on Monday, while Sydney reached 183.9 cpl, Melbourne 177.3 and Brisbane posted 178.3 cpl.

For context, December petrol prices across Australia’s three largest capitals were about 150 cents per litre, a huge 19 per cent cheaper.

Unfortunately, this squeeze will get worse as Russia expands its invasion of Ukraine into the nation’s capital and western cities.

That has triggered a wave of economic sanctions from the US and Europe, pushing global oil prices to an eight-year high of $US105 ($143) over the weekend.

Prices later eased on news that the sanctions have carved out Russian energy exports, but analysts are warning the future for oil prices is still looking up, not down.

That’s already happening – Brent crude oil prices rose 3.5 per cent on Monday to $US101.8 a barrel, while WTI rose 4.5 per cent to $US96.1.

OANDA senior analyst Jeffrey Halley said those are “sharp” rises.

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“Volatility is set to continue, with short-term direction at the mercy of headlines from Eastern Europe,” he said.

US mulls releasing oil reserves

These higher oil prices flow through to Australian motorists because our demand for petrol is much higher than local production, meaning most demand is serviced from overseas oil refineries, mainly in Singapore.

The Singapore Mogas gasoline price has already risen to 97.8 cents per litre this month – about 34 per cent higher than the 12-month average.

The Australian Institute of Petroleum said it takes about two weeks for international oil price rises to flow through to bowsers, setting the stage for a further lift in retail prices by mid-March.

There are, however, several factors that could put downward pressure on these oil prices.

US President Joe Biden said late last week that the White House is working through plans to release oil from its strategic reserves, a move that could ease global prices over coming weeks.

“We are actively working with countries around the world to elevate collective release from the strategic petroleum reserves of major energy-consuming countries,” President Biden said.

It would be the second time Mr Biden has released oil reserves recently, following a move in November to release 50 million barrels in a bid to ease petrol prices as motorists hit the roads after COVID-19 lockdowns.

The White House is trying to convince Japan and China to release some of their oil reserves onto the global market too.

Meanwhile, OPEC nations will also meet on Wednesday to decide whether oil production in the Middle East should be expanded in April by more than the planned 400,000 barrels per day.

But analysts said it’s likely OPEC maintains its current trajectory.

“I won’t hold my breath,” BetaShares analyst David Bassanese said.

This article was first published on The New Daily, read the original article here.

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