Image of a gas station in the Philippines illustrating rising fuel prices amid Middle East tensions.
Image of a gas station in the Philippines illustrating rising fuel prices amid Middle East tensions.
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Fuel prices rise in Philippines as Middle East tensions persist

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Oil companies raised gasoline and diesel prices on May 19 while lowering kerosene rates, citing renewed geopolitical risks in the Middle East. The Department of Energy set maximum adjustments to stabilize the market.

Energy Secretary Sharon Garin announced the changes on May 18, prescribing a maximum increase of P1.21 per liter for gasoline and P2.82 per liter for diesel. Kerosene prices will drop by at least P2.21 per liter. The adjustments follow a significant rollback the previous week.

Garin explained that the DOE determines values based on company-reported replacement costs, freight, insurance, and transportation. She noted ongoing reviews of industry submissions to assess whether current rules need easing.

The country’s fuel inventory stood at 45.33 days as of May 15, down from 50.7 days the prior week. Garin stated the levels are not alarming, as supply from other countries remains assured and the DOE is prepared to procure additional stocks if needed.

Industry sources linked the hikes to escalating tensions in the Middle East, a key oil-producing region. Prices in Metro Manila now range from P73.68 to P108.18 per liter for gasoline and up to P97.65 per liter for diesel.

Was die Leute sagen

Initial reactions on X highlight concerns over rising fuel prices in the Philippines due to Middle East tensions, with media reports, official accounts, and users discussing economic impacts, market volatility, and skepticism about reserves and policy responses.

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Realistic photo of a Philippine gas station celebrating fuel price rollbacks to P23 per liter for diesel, with happy drivers amid jeepneys and price signs.
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Fuel prices roll back up to P23 per liter starting April 14 after weeks of Middle East-driven hikes

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Oil firms confirmed price rollbacks effective 6 a.m. Tuesday, April 14, matching Department of Energy projections: diesel down P20.89 to P23 per liter, gasoline P4.43 to P4.50, and kerosene P8.50. The cuts end surges of over P100 on diesel since late February's Middle East crisis. President Marcos suspended excise taxes on LPG and kerosene, while a jeepney subsidy launches.

Fuel prices will increase again on Tuesday, May 5, with diesel rising by P2.66 per liter and gasoline by P2.21 per liter, Energy Secretary Sharon Garin said. Kerosene prices will decline by P3.53 per liter.

Von KI berichtet

Fuel prices in the Philippines are expected to decline again this week, though on a smaller scale, according to Department of Energy estimates. Diesel could fall by P8 to P10 per liter, gasoline by around P0.40 per liter or rise up to P1 per liter, and kerosene by P11 per liter.

Updated industry estimates project even larger diesel cuts of P24 to P26 per liter and gasoline P2.50 to P3.50 per liter starting April 21, up from earlier P17-P19 projections, as the global oil war premium continues to unwind—extending relief from the April 14 rollbacks amid the 2026 fuel crisis.

Von KI berichtet

The National Petroleum Company reported minor fuel price changes on Wednesday that take effect Thursday, May 7. 93-octane gasoline rises 0.1 pesos per liter and diesel falls 47.3 pesos, while kerosene stays the same.

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