Gasoline prices in Bad Segeberg surpass €2 per liter due to the ongoing Strait of Hormuz blockade, sparking worries over heating costs in gas- and oil-reliant homes. Local provider EWS vows price stability through long-term procurement.
Following initial national surges where diesel prices overtook gasoline—triggered by Iran's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz—gasoline at Bad Segeberg pumps has now climbed above €2 per liter. The crisis disrupts oil supplies, also pushing up wholesale electricity and gas markets. In the Segeberg district, where most homes use gas or oil heating, consumers fear repeats of past spikes from Russia's Ukraine invasion.
The Verbraucherzentrale Schleswig-Holstein notes price drivers extend beyond crude oil. Local homeowner Karsten Lange from Wittenborn suspects opportunism: "It depends on the war's end, but I think corporations are price gouging since the blockade is recent."
If the blockade continues, private customers could see sharp hikes, with rights to terminate contracts. However, Energie und Wasser Wahlstedt/Bad Segeberg (EWS) CEO Marco Voß reassures: "Our long-term procurement strategy ensures stability, even in volatile markets." HanseWerk similarly buffers short-term swings but ties long-term trends to geopolitics. Providers lean on fixed gas contracts.