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Consumers hit with fresh round of petrol price pain

Supply cuts by oil producers are having an impact on petrol prices, potentially boosting inflation.

Supply cuts by oil producers are having an impact on petrol prices, potentially boosting inflation. Photo: Getty

Motorists are forking out well over $2 a litre for fuel in parts of the country due to spiking oil prices and a weakening Australian dollar.

In some corners of the nation, petrol prices have overtaken the highs of last year after the conflict in Ukraine sent prices soaring.

Average prices in Sydney have hit $2.20 a litre for unleaded petrol, according to Compare the Market data – a whisper above the $2.18 a litre average reached during the peak last year.

Volatility in global oil markets is underpinning higher petrol and diesel prices in Australia, with the Brent oil futures lifting above $US93 a barrel late last week.

This was the highest level reached by the key oil benchmark since November 2022.

Commonwealth Bank commodities expert Vivek Dhar said supply cuts by major oil producers were keeping upward pressure on prices, with the latest data showing global stockpiles were already starting to decline sharply.

He said both Saudi Arabia and Russia had extended their supply and export cuts through to the end of the year against expectations they would ease in October.

Mr Dhar said oil prices above $US100 a barrel were not unthinkable in the second half of 2023 under these conditions but stockpiles would need to fall as rapidly in September as in August for that to eventuate.

He said elevated refining margins and a weaker Australian dollar were also feeding into the higher cost of petrol and diesel in Australia.

“A weaker Australian dollar looms as a threat in coming months if China’s economic data surprises on the downside and iron ore prices retreat materially,” the analyst wrote in a note.

Higher fuel prices could also complicate the Reserve Bank’s task of returning inflation to its two-to-three per cent target range.

AMP economist Shane Oliver said fuel prices would amount to a direct boost to inflation numbers and would likely worry Australia’s central bank.

But he said it would be unlikely to trigger another interest rate hike in isolation.

Dr Oliver said the latest fuel price hike was hitting the economy at a very different time than when the conflict in Ukraine triggered a surge last year.

He said the surge in prices last year was from a much lower base and came alongside supply shortfalls and growing demand for just about everything.

“This time around it is a bit different, the magnitude of the increase isn’t as pronounced and everything else isn’t also going up,” he told AAP.

Paired with a weakening consumer sector, high fuel prices may act as a “tax on spending” and help weigh on economic activity.

With households tightening their belts, Dr Oliver said the retailers may not be in a position to pass on higher transport as readily as last year.

He also said an extra $10 a week in fuel costs would amount to another hit to household budgets at a time when mortgage holders were already enduring painful increases in their repayments.

– AAP

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