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Petrol could fall below $2 a litre by next month

Petrol could fall below $2 a litre by next month
A litre of 92-octane and 95-octane petrol is reportedly listed at $2.05 and $2.09 respectively across all brands.
PHOTO: The Straits Times

Fuel pump prices are likely to fall in the coming days, although motorists are unlikely to see their bills shrinking by as much as the plunge in crude prices.

According to Bloomberg, a barrel of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude was at a record low of minus US$0.76 (S$1.10) as at 5pm Singapore time, while Brent was at US$22.03 - down from US$24.49 and US$27.39 respectively a month ago, and around US$66 and US$74 respectively 12 months ago.

Despite that, pump prices here have remained stable.

According to Fuel Kaki, a Consumers Association of Singapore portal which tracks fuel prices, 92-and 95-octane petrol are listed at $2.05 and $2.09 a litre respectively across all brands.

These prices, before discounts, have remained unchanged since March 25.

A litre of 98-octane is listed at between $2.43 and $2.69, while diesel is between $1.69 and $1.72.

Oil industry consultant Ong Eng Tong said pump prices should test the $2 level by next month, with 92-octane falling below $2 - a level not seen since 2016.

"The oil companies have to do something because a slowdown in demand is causing a storage problem," he said. "Otherwise, they will have to start giving it away free."

Motorists have long complained that pump prices often reflect an increase in oil prices quickly, but are slow to reflect drops.

Mr Jeremy Chua, editor of online motoring magazine Torque, said: "There is no transparency in the pricing of petrol and diesel in Singapore. This is why time and time again, consumers accuse oil companies of collusion and cartel-like behaviour.

"Until transparent pricing is mandated, these accusations will continue."

In a Parliamentary sitting on March 25, Ms Lee Bee Wah (Nee Soon GRC) asked if retail prices at petrol pumps reflected the plunge in crude oil rates, which had fallen sharply in earlier months.

Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Trade and Industry and Foreign Affairs Tan Wu Meng said retail petrol prices here had in fact fallen with the decline in crude oil prices.

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He noted that between Jan 2 and March 9, oil prices had fallen from US$66 a barrel to US$34 a barrel, and that more than three-quarters of the drop was passed on to consumers.

"The listed price of octane 95 petrol fell by 20 cents per litre, with a slight lag of six days," he said. "This represents a pass-through of over three-quarters of the decrease in crude oil price."

Dr Tan also cited a study on petrol prices in 2017 by the then Competition Commission of Singapore. It found that, on average, petrol prices took longer to go up when crude prices increased, compared with cuts when crude oil prices fell.

Meanwhile, gas and electricity tariffs have not changed significantly from a year ago.

According to the Energy Market Authority (EMA), the general gas tariff for the April-to-June period is 17.11 cents per kWh, down from 17.23 cents in the January-to-March period, and 18.8 cents in the April-to-June period last year.

Domestic electricity is 24.62 cents per kWh for April, down from 25.94 cents in January. It was 24.39 cents in April last year.

Natural gas is the main fuel for power generation here. The commodity is trading at US$1.93 per million British thermal units, down from US$2.52 a year ago.

An EMA spokesman said electricity and gas tariffs for each quarter are derived from average gas prices (which are indexed to oil prices) in the preceding 21/2 months, causing a lag in tariff changes.

Also, fuel costs constitute about half of the tariff. "A 10 per cent decrease in fuel costs, for example, would result in a tariff reduction of 5 to 5.5 per cent, assuming non-fuel costs remain unchanged," he said.

This article was first published in The Straits Times. Permission required for reproduction.

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