Business Day

Deregulati­ng SA’s fuel price put on hold

- Denis Droppa

The DA’s campaign to make fuel cheaper by deregulati­ng the price has been put on hold until 2024.

In July 2022 the party submitted its Fuel Price Deregulati­on Bill notice, saying it estimated doing so could lower the price at the pumps by up to R9/l. It said if the bill gets passed into law, the market would take control of the prices, allowing people to import cheaper fuel, wholesaler­s to distribute cheaper fuel and retailers to compete on the basis of price.

“The bill was put out for public comment and we collated it and took it to parliament­ary legal services. They told us it was effectivel­y a money bill and could only be introduced by the minister of finance. What this means is we will be proposing amendments to the budget in February 2024,” DA mineral resources & energy spokespers­on Kevin Mileham said.

In response to pressure on government to deregulate fuel prices and ease the financial burden on consumers, as other countries have done, mineral resources & energy minister Gwede Mantashe gazetted a notice in July 2022 proposing a price cap on 93 octane petrol only, which accounts for about 20% of petrol sold nationally and a higher percentage of inland fuel sales (93 petrol is not sold at the coast).

The retail price of petrol is set by the government but the price cap would allow fuel retailers to discount prices of 93 unleaded, allowing motorists to shop around for the best deal as they now do for diesel. The wholesale price of diesel is regulated but not the retail price, and can vary by more than R2/l between retailers.

The minister gave the public 30 days to comment on the gazetted notice. Nearly a year later, the proposal is still sitting with the department of mineral resources & energy.

“The department has received more than 400 submission­s, which are still under discussion internally; the outcome will be communicat­ed to all stakeholde­rs as soon as all internal processes have been concluded,” the department of mineral resources & energy said, without giving a time frame.

The Fuel Retailers Associatio­n (FRA) has warned motorists shouldn’t expect major price savings if the bill is passed. Though drivers will be able to shop around for better prices, they could only expect marginal discounts as petrol stations have small profit margins to play with, FRA CEO Reggie Sibiya said.

External factors such as the dollar-based price of petroleum products, the rand-dollar exchange rate and shipping costs account for about 54% of the basic fuel price, while levies and duties account for 27% and wholesale and retail margins for about 15%. Sibiya said most of the retail margin paid to fuel station owners (now R2.42 on every litre) goes to rental and operationa­l expenses, leaving little room for discountin­g.

Petrol users across SA are paying about R1.50/l more for fuel in May 2023 than at the same time in 2022. The increases to 93 unleaded inland and 95 unleaded at the coast represent increases of about 7% to petrol over a year period. The wholesale price of diesel over the same time has decreased from R21.99/l to R20.15/l inland, and from R21.34/l in May 2022 to R19.43/l at the coast.

The fuel price is adjusted each month and is determined by the rand-dollar exchange rate and internatio­nal petroleum prices.

 ?? ?? The DA believes deregulati­ng fuel prices could slash prices by up to R9 a litre.
The DA believes deregulati­ng fuel prices could slash prices by up to R9 a litre.

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