The Post

Petrol fight fires up over the south

- RACHEL CLAYTON

A million motorists could be saving money at the pump if petrol giants allowed Gull NZ access to terminals, Gull New Zealand boss Dave Bodger says.

A lack of competitio­n was keeping petrol prices high in Wellington and the South Island because it could not afford to build a fuel terminal, including large holding tanks, in the South Island and the big petrol companies would not supply it with fuel.

A Government report on Wednesday found gross profit margins on fuel at the pump had doubled to about 30 cents a litre in Wellington and the South Island over the past four years.

Gull operates in most of the North Island but had not ventured south of Levin, constraine­d geographic­ally by its only terminal in Mt Maunganui.

Gull had tried to buy petrol from its big competitor­s in the South Island, but was given the ‘‘vertical finger’’, Bodger said.

Bodger said one way to deal with the lack of competitio­n would be for the Government to step in and allow independen­t players access to South Island terminals.

Z Energy spokesman Jonathan Hill said Bodger’s stance ‘‘was not fair, or right’’.

Gull unsuccessf­ully bid for South Island service stations that Z was required to divest as part of its takeover of Caltex NZ.

‘‘As a condition of bidding they had to confirm that they had access to fuel supply in the South Island,’’ Hill said. ‘‘We challenge Gull to invest in New Zealand rather than looking for [the] Government to give it a free ride.’’

Mobil New Zealand manager Andrew McNaught also said there was no barrier to Gull investing in its own terminal in the South Island. BP declined to comment.

Caltex Australia bought Gull for $340 million last year.

Other small operators such as Allied, Waitomo, and McKeown operated in a similar way to Gull with small stations and abovegroun­d tanks. But they bought their fuel from Mobile or Z, rather than importing their own.

Oil market expert Ian Twomey said that made Gull one of a kind.

‘‘In the areas where [Gull] are most prominent, which is most of the North Island, they’ve stopped the margin going up, whereas the margin has climbed in Wellington and the South Island.’’

"We challenge Gull to invest in New Zealand rather than looking for [the] Government to give it a free ride." Z Energy spokesman Jonathan Hill

 ?? PHOTO: CHRIS SKELTON/STUFF ?? Gull NZ general manager Dave Bodger says Gull has been shut out of accessing petrol terminals in the South Island.
PHOTO: CHRIS SKELTON/STUFF Gull NZ general manager Dave Bodger says Gull has been shut out of accessing petrol terminals in the South Island.

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