Australia extends temporary higher-sulfur petrol allowance until September amid fuel supply disruptions
The Facts
- Australia extended its temporary easing of fuel-quality standards until September.
- The temporary change allows petrol with sulfur content of up to 50 parts per million instead of the usual 10 parts per million.
- Energy Minister Chris Bowen announced the extension on Saturday in televised remarks.
- Australia imports most of its fuel and has experienced localized shortages or supply pressure as disruptions linked to the Iran conflict affected supply chains.
- A fire at Viva Energy's Geelong refinery in Victoria has added to concerns about Australia's fuel supply.
- Bowen said Australia had 46 days of petrol in reserve as of Saturday.
Context
What exactly changed in the fuel rules?
The government extended a temporary waiver that lets petrol sold in Australia contain up to 50 parts per million of sulfur, rather than the standard 10 parts per million, and kept that arrangement in place until September Reuters,Perth Now,EconoTimes.
Why did the government extend the waiver?
Sources say the extension was meant to bolster fuel supply while Australia deals with disruptions tied to the Iran conflict, which has strained shipping and supply chains for an import-dependent country Reuters,Yahoo7 Finance,EconoTimes.
How tight are Australia's fuel supplies right now?
Bowen said Australia had 46 days of petrol, 31 days of diesel and 30 days of jet fuel in reserve, and that 61 fuel ships were on their way, indicating supply had improved but was still being closely managed Straits Times.
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