Jamaica Gleaner

JGRA renews call for transparen­cy in Petrojam’s oil pricing regime

- Paul Clarke/Gleaner Writer

THE GOVERNMENT is once again being urged to place the troubling oil pricing mechanism at the State-owned refinery Petrojam under urgent review in order to make the process more transparen­t to the public.

President of the Jamaica Gasolene Retailers Associatio­n (JGRA), Gregory Chung, has renewed the call as weeks of increases at the pumps have once again raised questions about the method used by Petrojam to arrive at its ex-refinery prices.

Chung said he has been monitoring the increases and has pointed to US sanctions against Iran and the fluctuatin­g foreign exchange rates as possible reasons for the uptick.

“We have reached out to the new minister, and we are just waiting for further dialogue on the matter because it is full time the pricing mechanism be made as transparen­t as possible to the public,” he said.

He also called for a review of the tax on fuel, which is floating somewhere near $50 per litre.

“We understand that those taxes are needed, but we think it has reached to the point where it’s going to have an inflationa­ry effect, and for gas station operators, the high price really does not suit us. The lower the cost for fuel, the happier are our customers, who are more than likely, as a result, to spend in other areas of our business,” he said.

The United States last week announced that it would no longer exempt a small set of countries, including China, from its oil sanctions regime against Iran. The result of this has been a marked increase in the cost for the product.

The Trump administra­tion’s tough stand on waivers could remove an additional 500,000 barrels per day or more from the market in the coming weeks, adding to production cuts planned by the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and ongoing production and export problems in Libya and Venezuela.

This, according to Chung, it is going to have a direct impact at the pumps locally and will hit customers in the pocket.

“Remember now, that we don’t

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Gregory Chung, president of the Jamaica Gasolene Retailers Associatio­n.
CONTRIBUTE­D Gregory Chung, president of the Jamaica Gasolene Retailers Associatio­n.

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