Government considers gasoline price ceiling amid Middle East tensions

The South Korean government is reviewing measures to curb gasoline price surges triggered by escalating Middle East tensions. President Lee Jae Myung criticized unfair price hikes during a Cabinet meeting and directed the consideration of a price ceiling. The Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources issued a Level 1 alert to prepare for potential energy supply disruptions.

On Thursday, March 5, 2026, during a Cabinet meeting at Cheong Wa Dae in Seoul, President Lee Jae Myung condemned the sharp rise in domestic gasoline prices amid escalating Middle East tensions. He noted that while international crude prices have increased due to supply concerns, there has been no serious disruption to global oil supplies, yet retail prices in Korea surged immediately without the usual two- to three-week lag.

"Objectively, there has not been a serious disruption to global oil supplies, yet prices suddenly skyrocketed," Lee said, citing reports of price differences by time of day and hikes of nearly 200 won per liter at some stations. According to the Korea National Oil Corp.'s Opinet, the national average gasoline price reached 1,807.1 won ($1.23) per liter as of 10 a.m., up 29.6 won from the previous day—the first time above 1,800 won since August 2022. In Seoul, it rose to 1,874.4 won, a 31.8 won increase. Diesel prices also jumped, with the national average at 1,785.3 won (up 56.5 won) and Seoul at 1,865.4 won (up 61.4 won).

The president instructed officials to quickly explore price control options, including a ceiling that could vary by region or fuel type if a nationwide limit proves challenging. He called for urgent legal measures to penalize unfair hikes, noting current difficulties in enforcement. Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol stated the government could invoke Article 23 of the Petroleum Business Act to set an upper limit via official notice if prices remain high. "Currently, petroleum supply is stable... but there have recently been cases where businesses seek to pursue private gains by excessively raising prices," Koo said, describing such acts as "shameless behavior."

Separately, the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources issued a Level 1 (attention) resource security alert for oil and gas—the first for petroleum in Korea—due to the Iran crisis following U.S. and Israeli attacks over the weekend. International oil prices have risen over 10%, exacerbated by concerns over the Strait of Hormuz closure. Korea holds 208 days of oil reserves and plans to secure additional supplies, prepare strategic reserve releases, and intensify market monitoring. An intensive crackdown on unfair practices like hoarding, collusion, and price gouging begins Friday. Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan said, "Since it is difficult to predict when the conflict will end, the government will maintain full readiness and monitor the situation very seriously."

President Lee also directed a 100 trillion won ($68 billion) program to stabilize financial markets and ordered preparations for evacuating Koreans in the region, coordinating with allies if needed.

ተያያዥ ጽሁፎች

President Lee Jae-myung announces fuel price cap monitoring at press conference, with visuals of compliant gas stations.
በ AI የተሰራ ምስል

President Lee calls for monitoring gas stations as fuel price cap takes effect

በAI የተዘገበ በ AI የተሰራ ምስል

President Lee Jae-myung on Friday called for close monitoring of local gas stations to ensure compliance with a fuel price cap, implemented to curb fluctuating costs from international uncertainty and ease consumer burdens. The government enacted the ceiling at midnight. This marks the first such measure since 1997.

Gasoline and diesel prices rose moderately in South Korea on Sunday as the government considers adopting a price cap system amid concerns over rising energy prices due to the escalating Middle East conflict. According to the Korea National Oil Corp., the nationwide average gasoline price reached 1,893.3 won ($1.27) per liter, up 3.9 won from the previous day, while diesel increased 4.8 won to 1,915.4 won per liter.

በAI የተዘገበ

South Korean stocks tumbled nearly 6% on March 9 amid U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran driving oil past $100 per barrel. The won hit a 17-year low of 1,495.5 per dollar as circuit breakers activated. President Lee Jae-myung ordered a fuel price cap to curb soaring petroleum costs.

South Korea's import prices surged 16.1 percent in March, the sharpest rise in over 28 years, driven by soaring global oil prices amid the Middle East conflict, Bank of Korea data showed. Dubai crude jumped 87.9 percent to $128.52 per barrel. The export price index also rose 16.3 percent.

በAI የተዘገበ

As Middle East tensions worsen after U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran—with no Korean casualties reported—South Korea is prioritizing evacuations for 21,000 nationals in the region, stabilizing plunging markets, and securing oil amid Strait of Hormuz closure fears. This follows initial assurances of stable energy supplies.

As the U.S.-Israel Operation Epic Fury against Iran's leadership expands—with Iranian retaliation, Hezbollah, and Houthi involvement—the conflict's fallout intensifies for South Korea. Stocks plunged further Wednesday, oil prices rose amid Strait of Hormuz threats, and policymakers urge preparations for prolonged instability, building on prior evacuations and stabilization measures.

በAI የተዘገበ

The Department of Energy stated that March 9 is the final day for capped fuel prices, with adjustments taking effect on March 10. Several gas stations reported supply shortages from the rush of customers. This occurs amid global oil price hikes due to escalating Middle East conflicts.

 

 

 

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