South Africa launches diesel pricing overhaul amid ongoing Middle East shortages

In response to diesel shortages triggered by Middle East conflicts including recent attacks on Iran, South Africa's Department of Mineral Resources and Petroleum has begun a comprehensive review of the fuel pricing mechanism. Reforms to industry margins are targeted for March 2027, with a temporary R3 per litre fuel levy cut providing short-term relief amid rising global oil prices.

The shortages, particularly severe in the Western Cape's Overberg region—where a Caledon resident lamented 'Daar’s niks diesel in die Overberg nie'—saw supplier OVK suspend orders on 9 March 2026 due to surging demand, followed by a price increase from midnight 17 March as subsidies ran dry.

Diesel prices, unlike regulated petrol, follow an import parity model: 89% tied to international benchmarks like surging Brent crude, plus freight, levies over R6.35/litre, and retailer-set margins that enable rapid hikes critics call 'unethical price gouging' (though legal). South Africa imports most diesel after halving refining capacity, with it powering over 50% of liquid fuels and vital trucking amid Transnet woes.

To safeguard food security, the government enacted a temporary R3/litre reduction in the general fuel levy. Robert Maake, director of the fuel pricing mechanism, noted the formula accounts for import costs, local factors, Middle East tensions, and a weaker rand. The ongoing review, with a contracted service provider, focuses on wholesale, retail, storage, and distribution margins, aiming for completion by March 2027.

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German gas station at midnight displaying reduced petrol and diesel prices after the government's 17-cent-per-litre tax cut takes effect.
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Fuel tax cut on petrol and diesel takes effect

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The German government's fuel discount took effect at midnight. Taxes on petrol and diesel drop by about 17 cents per litre for two months. It remains unclear how quickly pump prices will reflect the cut.

South African petrol prices will rise by R3.06 per litre to R23.25 inland from midnight on 1 April, while diesel reaches a record R26.11 per litre after a R7.51 increase. The hike stems from global oil prices exceeding $100 per barrel amid the Iran war and a weakened rand. A temporary R3 per litre reduction in the fuel levy cushions the impact.

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Petrol prices in South Africa will increase by 14% and diesel by nearly 24% from Wednesday, 6 May, due to the ongoing Iran war. The Department of Mineral Resources and Petroleum (DMPR) announced the hikes amid rising global Brent crude prices. Temporary fuel levy reductions offer some relief.

The Kenya Transporters Association has urged the Ministry of Energy to urgently tackle ongoing fuel shortages ahead of the next price review scheduled for May 14, 2026.

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Following last week's rollbacks, diesel prices are forecast to drop another P17 to P19 per liter and gasoline P2 to P3 per liter starting April 21, potentially taking diesel below P130, as Middle East tensions ease further with a holding ceasefire.

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.

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South Africa's Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana is set to announce on 28 April whether to extend the temporary fuel levy reduction amid rising fiscal pressures and global energy risks. The decision follows a R3 per litre cut in the levy, which has cost the government R6 billion in foregone revenue for the month.

 

 

 

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