I look forward to the time when EV's are mass produced and I can recharge my car for a few dollars a week. These petrol prices are a rip off by the fossil fuel producers.
Drivers around the nation are facing rising fuel costs as the NRMA warns the cost per litre could reach the highest price in more than a decade by October.
The average price of a litre of petrol in Perth this week was a whopping 165.7 cents, while average prices for regular unleaded reached 164.7 cents per litre in Sydney with prices at major service stations as high as 175.9 cents per litre.
NRMA spokesman Peter Khoury said the steady rise came as the OPEC countries continued to choke supply, artificially inflating global oil prices at a time when demand for oil was recovering globally.
“These high prices are hitting our essential workers the hardest as they are still travelling to work every day ... (and) hurting at a time when the community needs relief the most,” Mr Khoury said on Thursday.
“If you can hold off, customers can expect to see some relief at the bowser towards the end of the month with prices expected to fall close to 140 cents per litre at the low point of the cycle.”
Australia’s international benchmark price Singapore Mogas has continued to rise steadily to almost $US90 a barrel. Sydney’s Terminal Gate Price has reached a 21-month high of 137.7 cents per litre.
Mr Khoury said if prices continued to increase, the average Sydney regular unleaded fuel price could jump to 170 cents per litre by October, the highest average fuel price since before the start of the global financial crisis in 2008.
Despite Sydney seeing the highest prices in over a year, drivers have so far been spared record breaking prices of 172.6 cents per litre in Brisbane earlier this week.
The average fuel price in Melbourne this week is 159.6 cents, 146.9 cents in Darwin , 149.9 cents in Hobart, 136.4 cents in Adelaide and 150.6 cents in Canberra.