Albanese reduces fuel cost and announces national fuel security plan

·

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has confirmed the government will halve the fuel excise on petrol and diesel for three months. This comes after calls from the Coalition to ease fuel costs for motorists.

Albanese confirmed the measure will reduce the cost of fuel by 26.3 cents a litre and an agreement between states and territories will ensure their budgets won’t benefit from elevated GST revenue.

“We are announcing the commonwealth government will halve the fuel excise on petrol and diesel for three months. The halving of the fuel excise will be reduce the cost of fuel by 26.3 cents per litre,” Albanese said.

“We are making fuel cheaper today because we understand that Australians are under serious pressure.”

Albanese also encouraged city-based workers to use public transport to ease pressure on fuel supplies for the industries “that need it.” The Victorian government also recently announced public transport will be free across the state in April.

Treasurer of Australia Jim Chalmers also confirmed the government would cut the heavy vehicle road user charge to zero for the next three months.

The Treasurer said the measures announced today would cut the cost of a 65-litre tank by around $19 and would cost the budget $2.55bn. Delaying the increase to the heavy vehicle road user charge would reduce revenue by $53m.

“So this relief is temporary, it’s timely, and it’s responsible. It’s all about taking some of the edge off these high petrol prices which are putting such extraordinary pressure on household budgets right around the country,” Chalmers said.

He added that the fuel cuts are expected to lower headline inflation by roughly half a percentage point in the June quarter.

As part of the announcement, Albanese also introduced a national fuel security plan, endorsed by all states and territories at the national cabinet meeting.

The plan defines four levels of action: ‘plan and prepare’; ‘keeping Australia moving’; ‘taking targeted action’; and ‘protecting critical services’. Albanese noted the current measures sit within the second level of action, focused on keeping Australia moving.

Although each level has specific triggers, Albanese said the country is still “substantially away” from needing to move to the third stage.

Source: The Australian

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Penny Pachos reinstated as St Euphemia College principal after Archbishop meeting

Penny Pachos has been reinstated as Principal of St Euphemia College, with the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese confirming her continuation.

5,000 years beneath our feet: A Kytherian dig that needs us

This month, a team of archaeologists from the University of Sydney is starting to dig into 5,000 years of our story there.

Antipodean Palette 2026 to celebrate the continuing story of Greek Australian culture

Antipodean Palette has become one of the most significant annual cultural events in Melbourne's Greek Australian calendar.

Thousands of free water-saving kits to be distributed across Cyprus

Cyprus is stepping up efforts to tackle water scarcity by distributing thousands of free water-saving devices to households and businesses.

Steve Maras confident Adelaide’s Rundle St will rebound despite rising vacancies

Rundle Street’s vacancy rate has risen above 10 per cent, reflecting pressures facing retailers across Australia.

You May Also Like

Greece rejects draft at European Council Summit after no mention of Turkey sanctions

Greece rejected the draft final statement for the European Council summit last night on the basis that there were no prospect of sanctions against Turkey and instead merely expressed “solidarity with Greece and Cyprus.”

Magna Graecia – Part 4: From Colony to Colossus: Syracuse and Hellenism in Sicily

Syracuse (in present-day Sicily) was founded in 734 BCE by settlers from Corinth and Tenea, led by their oikist (founder), Archias.

Chief Scientist positions Cyprus as global AI and innovation hub at Cyprus Diaspora Forum

The 3rd Cyprus Diaspora Forum showcased Cyprus’ growing ambition to position itself as an internationally connected innovation hub.