Off the wire
Australia's NSW to assess damage following 2 dead in ferocious storms  • Spotlight: Okinawa assembly dominated by anti-U.S. base relocation candidates as tiny island riled by ongoing abuses  • Roundup: Delegates urge concerted efforts for further cooperation at Shangri-La Dialogue  • President Xi eyes deeper China-U.S. cooperation in Asia-Pacific affairs  • Australian job ads rise in May  • Indian stocks open higher  • Tokyo stocks retreat in morning as unimpressive U.S. jobs data sends yen higher  • President Xi urges China, U.S. to deepen mutual trust, cooperation  • Feature: Nepalese mothers with new-borns battle for survival in high-altitude hunt for Yarsagumba  • Brazil U23 starlet fires Palmeiras into top four  
You are here:   Home

Petrol prices at 17-year lows in Australia: report

Xinhua, June 6, 2016 Adjust font size:

Australian motorists are filling up for less in 2016, after a report found that petrol prices were at low levels not seen since 1999.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) found that prices across the nation were at 17-year lows, with the average cost of filling up the car coming in at 81.4 U.S. cents per liter throughout the March 2016 quarter -- almost 10 cents per liter cheaper than the previous quarter.

Rod Sims, chairman of the ACCC, said a number of factors were influencing petrol prices in Australia, including a drop in crude oil prices and closer regulation by the retail watchdog.

"Motorists benefited from the lowest quarterly petrol prices in inflation adjusted terms since 1999," Sims said in a statement released on Monday.

"The low petrol prices were due to two main influences: firstly, crude oil prices and international refined petrol prices in inflation adjusted terms fell to lows not seen since 2002 and 2008, respectively."

"Secondly, gross retail margins decreased in the quarter. The ACCC believed that retail margins were unreasonably high in the second half of 2015 and wrote to the major petrol retailers in early February 2016 seeking an explanation for the high retail margins."

Sydney was the cheapest major city for motorists to fill up in, with an average March quarter price of 79.2 U.S. cents, while the nation's capital, Canberra, and Tasmania's capital city Hobart were the most expensive -- with motorists paying up to 89.6 cents per liter throughout the first quarter of 2016. Endit