Originally Posted by
eesakiwi
US$1.65 a Litre for 95 octane in NewZealand.
I dunno how many litres in a gallon, I worked it out once using the fact that in NZ a '44 Gallon drum' (3 foot high by 2 feet dia) holds 210 Litres....that a gallons 4 & 1/2 (4.5) litre.
And I must be right because a 'quart' has 1.125 litres in it.
But then I was told I was wrong. Which probably explains why we pay so **** much for our petrol here. Nobody else can figure it out either...
It might be higher taxes on a liter of fuel in N.Z. ?
https://www.aa.co.nz/cars/owning-a-car/fuel-prices-and-types/petrol/
It could be the exchange rates too. I believe most crude oil is traded in USD ? If the NZD slips against the USD that would drive up prices at the pump were you are.
The other thing is that you only have one refinery and that's tightly regulated. You could say that there's a monopoly. Competition with other refined fuel producers could help drive down gas prices.
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We're getting our seasonal increase on the cost of a gallon of gas here in the states now. We're coming up on our summer season and that means more leisure driving and more demand. The sales at our company gas station in the summer are roughly 2 - 3x what they are during the dead of winter.
The other thing is that our refineries switch over production seasonally. Sometimes they focus more on producing gasoline and other times they focus more on diesel, kerosene, and home heating fuel. There's little demand for #2 home heating fuel in August so that's when the price is at it's lowest every year.
There's a relationship between crude oil prices and the other commodities like steel, copper, and PM's though because they're energy intensive to produce and transport.
Anyway ... the basic idea is right. There's the relationship between
scrap prices and gasoline but you just have to look a little deeper to see what's causing gas prices to go up.
Sometimes it's the normal seasonal cycle. Othertimes, it's because the price of a barrel of crude has gone up.
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