Fuel data for May is showing a listless fuel price picture. This is according to the unaudited mid-month fuel price data released by the Central Energy Fund.
The overall picture is of little change. The Rand has slipped marginally by thirteen cents against the US dollar since the Department of Energy’s surprise early announcement of the May fuel price on Sunday, April 28. The international oil price has also ebbed and flowed, with the landed basic price of petrol dropping by over 60 cents per litre in the first days of May before regaining ground after the election.
The result is a mixed picture. For petrol, the Rand’s weakness was mostly a counterpart of oil’s retreat, pointing to a seven cents-a-litre reduction at month end. Diesel fared worse, with a slight increase of 12 cents a litre on the cards, and illuminating paraffin showing a nine-cent rise. However, we remind you that the forthcoming Carbon Tax is due for introduction on June 5, and will add an additional nine cents a litre to the petrol price, and ten cents to the diesel price.
Our hope is that the new government will immediately set out its policy agenda which has a direct impact on fuel prices.