Motoring

With spring comes a slightly decreased fuel price

According to the CEF’s figures, ULP95 petrol is expected to be lower by around R2.35/l while ULP93 is set for a drop of around R2.18/l. Diesel is expected to drop by between 77c and 87c/l while illuminating paraffin will drop by around 82c/l.

Despite recent rand weakness against the US dollar, the average exchange rate against the US currency is still favourable and fuel in the country is still expected to decrease significantly when adjusted next week. The Automobile Association (AA) says current unaudited data from the Central Energy Fund (CEF) is indicating significant reductions to fuel prices across the board, but specifically to the prices of petrol.

“These decreases are certainly welcome and will provide some relief to motorists. Considering the expected decrease to ULP95, for instance, the price for this fuel will drop from its current R25.42/l to R23.07/l. This is cheaper than the June price of R24.17/l but still significantly higher than R21.84/l May pricing. It is also way off the January pricing of R19.61/l. Nevertheless, any decrease to fuel prices is good news,” notes the AA.

The downward movement in international product prices – oil prices – are the main driver behind the expected decreases, contributing 94% to the projected reductions. The average rand/US dollar exchange is playing a smaller role, but is still contributing the expected decreases.

“Although we are expecting fuel to be cheaper in September, we remain concerned about the overall high prices which impact on all consumers. The price hikes in June and July will continue to impact the economy and the financial situation of all South Africans. A sustainable solution to mitigating rising fuel costs is still necessary and until that solution is found, citizens will be at the mercy of fuel price hikes,” notes the association.

The AA again calls on the government to urgently initiate a transparent review of the fuel price to seek these answers. It stands by its earlier position that scrapping the General Fuel Levy (GFL) is not the solution.

“We note the calls by those who say this is a way of reducing the fuel price, but in our view this will not solve the problem, it will simply force the government to find alternative ways to collect the revenue generated by this tax. Instead, the structure and composition of the fuel price must be considered, along with a deeper interrogation of how the government currently allocates its funds,” concludes the AA.

Source: AA

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Matthys Ferreira

Served in SAPS for 22 years - specialised in forensic and crime scene investigation and forensic photography. A stint in photographic sales and management followed. Been the motoring editor at Lowveld Media since 2007. "A petrol head I am not but I am good at what I do".

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