Business / Money

Petrol prices fall below $3 in main centres, and further drop expected

14:26 pm on 4 August 2022

While costs at the pump are looking lower, drivers can expect a further drop over the next week, says a petrol pricing expert.

AA says the drop in crude oil prices means petrol costs in New Zealand are likely to fall further next week. (File image) Photo: RNZ / Dan Cook

Costs in the main centres are well below $3, according to price tracking app Gaspy.

Early on Thursday afternoon, the app showed Waitomo on Tinakori Road in Wellington was charging $2.59 a litre; Caltex on Newton Road in Auckland was charging $2.65; and in Christchurch, Waitomo on Fitzgerald Avenue was charging $2.47.

Automobile Association principal policy adviser Terry Collins said the price of crude oil had dropped significantly in the past few days, meaning costs in New Zealand were likely to fall further next week.

A barrel of crude oil has dropped from $US110 to $US96.78 in less than a week.

"It's come as a surprise on the international market, and it has been rapid over the last couple of days," Collins said.

The decline came as a result of demand falling short of predictions in the US due to recession fears, he said.

"Why it was unexpected is because in the US and globally, demand is starting to come back a bit.

"The inventories in the US went up, and with weakening demand, prices went down as a consequence."

Waitomo Group managing director Jimmy Ormsby said the drop was great news for customers.

"If the global price of crude is on it's way down, then that's reflected within a relatively short period of time at the pump in New Zealand," Ormsby said.

"I'd say if there's been a consistent drop this week, then you'd expect to see that at the pump within the next week to 10 days."

However, Ormsby warned global crude prices were still fluctuating week-to-week.

Collins said an array of factors could kick costs back up, the most significant being further sanctions from the EU on Russia due to take effect in December.

Supply also remains tight and international demand is predicted to increase in coming months.

"We've still got China in the lockdown as a consequence of Covid, so when that demand starts coming up, that could have some consequences," Collins said.

"It's extremely volatile, there's still a lot of things to be sorted out in the long term."

The government's fuel excise duty cut of 25 cents a litre have been extended until the end of January.