
Related

Mantashe adds Russia and Iran to nuclear chat
Wendell Roelf 19 Feb 2025



Sixty bodies retrieved from Stilfontein
Alexander Winning and Bhargav Acharya 15 Jan 2025




The Minister of Mineral and Petroleum Resources has announced the adjustment of fuel prices based on current local and international factors with effect from 1 January 2025.
South Africa’s fuel prices are adjusted monthly, informed by international and local factors.
International factors include the fact that South Africa imports both crude oil and finished products at a price set at the international level, including importation costs, e.g., shipping costs.
The main reasons for the fuel price adjustments are:
The average Brent Crude oil price increased slightly from $72.70 to $72.78 during the period under review. The main contributing factors are the Opec+ decision not to increase production in December and continued oversupply by non-Opec producers amid low economic growth globally.
The average international product prices of Petrol followed the increasing trend of crude oil. In contrast, the prices of middle distillates decreased slightly because of higher inventories for the winter season in the Northern Hemisphere. These factors led to higher contributions to the Basic Fuel Prices of petrol and diesel by 9.33 c/l and 2.93 c/l respectively and lower contributions to illuminating paraffin by 18.92 c/l.
The rand depreciated on average, against the US Dollar (from R17.93 to R18.11 per USD) during the period under review when compared to the previous one. This led to higher contributions to the Basic Fuel Prices of petrol, diesel and Illuminating Paraffin by 10.58 c/l, 11.11 c/l and 10.90 c/l respectively.
The cumulative slate amounted to a positive balance of R4.303 billion for petrol and diesel at the end of November 2024. In line with the provisions of the Self-Adjusting Slate Levy Mechanism, a slate levy remains unchanged at zero cents per litre in the price structures of petrol and diesel with effect from 1 January 2025.
In line with the Working Rules to determine the Basic Fuels Prices (BFP), the differential between 95 and 93 octanes is adjusted on the first Wednesday of each quarter. T
he BFP Octane differential has changed during the previous quarter and therefore the retail prices of 95 and 93 petrol octanes will be different in each fuel-pricing zone with effect from 1 January 2025.
The fuel prices schedule for the different zones will be published on Tuesday, 31 December 2024.