Otago Daily Times

Premium fuel price will fall prepoll: AA

- AIMEE SHAW

THE Automobile Associatio­n says the cost of 95 and 98 octane petrol will drop before the general election as fuel retailers move to display the price of premium fuel, pending any formal regulation.

Some service stations are charging up to 40c extra per litre for 95 and 98 octane fuel compared with 91 octane, but this is expected to be slashed drasticall­y as the prices for all fuel grades become more transparen­t, AA regulation­s adviser Mark Stockdale says.

The difference was around 5c per litre a decade ago.

Mr Stockdale said fuel retailers were compromisi­ng competitio­n and keeping motorists in the dark by not displaying the price of premium grade fuel.

‘‘At the moment the price is not displayed and so that’s why we’ve seen, around the country, a price disparity of 20c a litre or more between 91 octane and the premium grades. It is compromisi­ng competitio­n and it makes it hard for motorists to shop around and compare prices.’’

At present there is no legal requiremen­t for fuel retailers to display the price of premium grade fuels on their sign boards, and those that do, do so voluntaril­y, but this is set to change as part of the Government’s move to regulate the cost of fuel.

Service stations had been able to ‘‘hide a much higher price for premium’’, which was ‘‘not justified’’, for more than a decade, Mr Stockdale said.

The lack of transparen­cy around premium fuel prices had been an ongoing issue, and the AA had been advocating for a mandate to require service stations to display the prices of all fuel that they sold, he said.

‘‘By doing that, we believe that the service stations simply won’t advertise a price for the premium grade that is 20c or 30c or 40c a litre higher than 91 octane. That price discrepanc­y is completely unwarrante­d.

‘‘We think as a result of having to display the price under a future regulation, that will bring the price down — and we think that is going to happen sooner rather than later.’’

The AA is privy to a plan to introduce such a regulation, but was unable to comment on when this would come into effect, other than ‘‘ahead of the election’’.

Some service stations, including in Auckland, have already begun to display four or five prices of fuel on their sign boards.

Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Kris Faafoi wrote to fuel companies in December requesting this be done, shortly after the Commerce Commission report on the market was released, Mr Stockdale said.

Shortly after the report came out Z Energy said it had added the price of premium grades to its boards at stations in Auckland and would roll it out to all of its stations throughout the country by June.

BP and Mobil have also said they would work to implement this at their stations. Smaller retailer Waitomo has said it would include this on all the new sites it is building.

‘‘It is starting to happen.

Where it’s happening, we think the price will be lower, and as it rolls out to more of the country we will start to see a snowball effect,’’ Mr Stockdale said.

‘‘We expect the price of premium petrol will fall.’’

Where the price of premium fuel is displayed, motorists would notice significan­t savings at the pump. Similar regulation­s were implemente­d in New South Wales and Queensland several years ago and had the same result, he said.

Mr Stockdale said the actual cost to produce 95 octane was 4c a litre higher than with 91 octane.

The difference in price between 95 and 91 octane should be less than 10c a litre, he said. It used to be just 5c about 10 years ago.

Prices began creeping up about a decade ago, but in the past five years they had accelerate­d. Throughout 2018 and 2019 the prices had reached new highs, he said.

Where prices of premium fuel were displayed already, voluntaril­y, the difference had been reduced to about 13c.

‘‘If we see more competitio­n through more service stations displaying the price, we hope that will fall even further.’’ — The New Zealand Herald

 ?? PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON ?? Welcome news . . . Motorists might soon see some savings at the pump.
PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON Welcome news . . . Motorists might soon see some savings at the pump.

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