Diesel hits £1.03 a litre

Tuesday 2nd October 2007, 5:00PM BST.

texaco-wolverhampton.jpgFuel prices today soared past the £1-a-litre mark at fuel stations in the West Midlands.

Motorists were facing the record prices, of more than £4.54-a-gallon, following a Government’s 2p litre rise.

Hauliers, bus companies and taxi drivers in the region today warned they were fighting a losing battle to survive because of the rising costs.

At Texaco’s Molineux Service Station on Wolverhampton’s A449 Stafford Road, diesel was being sold at 103.9p per litre, or £4.72 a gallon, with unleaded at 98.9p.

Customer John Dale, a fireplace fitter from Telford, said: “My boss pays and he has to pass the cost on to the customer. The extra money has to come from somewhere.”

Read the full story in today’s Express & Star.

texaco-wolverhampton.jpgFuel prices today soared past the £1-a-litre mark at fuel stations in the West Midlands.

Motorists were facing the record prices, of more than £4.54-a-gallon, following a Government’s 2p litre rise.

Hauliers, bus companies and taxi drivers in the region today warned they were fighting a losing battle to survive because of the rising costs.

At Texaco’s Molineux Service Station on Wolverhampton’s A449 Stafford Road, diesel was being sold at 103.9p per litre, or £4.72 a gallon, with unleaded at 98.9p.

Customer John Dale, a fireplace fitter from Telford, said: “My boss pays and he has to pass the cost on to the customer. The extra money has to come from somewhere.”

At another Texaco on Wolverhampton Road in Penkridge, the only service station in the village had diesel for sale at 100.9p, a rise from from 98.9p yesterday.

At a nearby station on the A5 at Gailey, diesel was £102.9. And at scores of other stations in the Black Country and Staffordshire, diesel was today priced at around 99p, with unleaded a penny or two cheaper.

The 2p rise, announced in Gordon Brown’s final budget before becoming Prime Minister, took the average price per litre of diesel to around 99.77p and unleaded petrol to 97.8p.

Industry observers predict food prices will start to rise as large stores pass the increase on to customers.

A string of fuel duty hikes imposed by current Chancellor Alistair Darling over the next two years will add £3,000 a year to the running costs of the average heavy goods vehicle, according to industry experts.

Haulier Aspray Transport, which employs around 500 people at its base in Willenhall, warned the price rises will impact on jobs.

Managing director Stuart Laight said today: “These increases will have a huge impact on us. We have taken on 70 people this year, half of them needing training. I don’t know whether we will be able to do that next year.

“For a lot of other companies that 2p per litre virtually wipes out their profits.”

And Colin Cherrington, a 71-year-old sales manager who commutes to Wolverhampton from Worcestershire, said: “It will affect me because I do so many miles each week. I normally shop around and go to the supermarket because it is cheaper.”

By Nick Pritchard and Simon Penfold


  1. 1
    Nick

    I’m sick of the governments attitude to fuel rises! All this rubbish about protecting the environment! Just where does all the extra revnue go! We all drive because we have too and not because we want too! We get fleeced for everything in this country and it’s time to stand up to this ridiculous policy!

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  2. 2
    birchy

    its ridiculous, if cameron wants votes he shuld cut fuel tax, over 66p per litre of what you pay it tax!

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  3. 3
    Andy T

    Wow !

    Theres a suprise, did anyone notice how the price went up in the middle of last week. Im sure some petrol stations were charging the new inflated price for the fuel they purchased at the older price.

    Welcome to ‘rip-off’ britain, what a great country we live in.
    Second rate public transport, substandard roads, and the motorist suffers most of all when money needs to be raised to fund gorvernment and council schemes.

    I wish I could leave this country but unfortunately with so many taxes and the cost of living I cant afford it.

    Report abuse

  4. 4
    strawb

    duty and vat anount to more than 66p per litre more like 75p. you all vote the idiots in either labour or conservative

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  5. 5
    Dominic

    Most car journeys aren’t actually “necessary”, in most cases people choose to use the car, and do have an alternative available.

    Car use is still cheap. Over the past 30 years the cost of owning and using a car has remained virtually static in real terms. Meanwhile bus/rail fares have increased a massive 75% in real terms. It ain’t the car driver who’s losing out.

    Most people could save more than the 2p/litre increase by driving within the speed limit and avoiding harsh acceleration, both of which would improve fuel consumption. Better still, just walk or cycle wherever possible and don’t use the fuel in the first place.

    PS> Yes I do own a car, but can’t say I’m very attached to it.

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  6. 6
    Bridget & Tony

    Yet ANOTHER sign of Rip Off Britain
    What happened to all of the oil in Iraq??? One minute the oil wells have metered facillities and when the US take over the oil wells are no longer metered? Because of the war Or is it because without the abillity to measure what is being taken out – no one knows where its going?

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  7. 7
    baggie boy

    This government dont deserve votes but I am sure it will do its normal reduce it by 3p two weeks before an election. It really does make me sick how us the motorist has to keep forking out more and more. The old saying “born free taxed to death” has never been more true!!!!!!!!!!!!

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  8. 8
    Jeff

    When you add VAT in it’s more like 80p. Disgraceful!

    It wouldn’t be so bad if all the money raised actually went on roads or to improve public transport.

    You can’t tax drivers into submission! It simply doesn’t work.

    Report abuse

  9. 9
    ken

    taxi drivers fighting a losing battle . dont make me laugh . i ordered a taxi the other night . and the driver was driving a jag

    Report abuse

  10. 10
    Martin Davies

    Oh well, we’ll all pay more for other goods and services to pay for companies not absorbing fuel cost increases.

    I’m not that bothered about this fuel increase. In the last 9 years I’ve seen petrol go up by 65%.
    I’ll use the car because its convenient. Its faster than public transport. Its more comfortable by far and gets me exactly where I want to go.
    So I pay for it – nothing new there.

    If I didn’t own a car I might decide not to buy one. But while I own the car and paying for it even while its parked up outside the house, might as well get some use out of it.

    Report abuse

  11. 11
    Dave Philips

    All businesses will do is offload any price increase to the general public. So in the end the public will be paying 2x, even 3x the price increase.

    Where does all this money collected as ‘tax’ go? I’d really like to know!
    I don’t want to hear rubbish about where it is supposed to go, because it obviously isn’t going there.

    Wait, hang on, do I hear another 10 year plan in the pipeline, to make Britain the best place to live? Britain is so far off track now with the majority of everything that plays an important part within our lives its completely irreversible.

    I’m waiting for the complete economical collapse. It’s only a matter of time. It doesn’t matter who comes to power, no-one can sort out this mess. Many utopian ideas, but all just talk.

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  12. 12
    Dean

    We have been out of the UK for two years now and the term Rip Off britain is absolutly correct. We are currently paying $1.32 for premium petrol this equates to approx 52p a litre. This still includes the gov taxation, the petrol pump profit margin and believe me the locals say this is expensive. The fuel has to be shipped in and processed at this price from crude oil. This would be laughable but for the sad irony that I get my fuel from a BP garage !!!!! yes you heard me right a British Petroleum garage, We plan to return in Jan 08 for a visit and dreading the cost of everything …Rip Off …..absolutely!!!

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  13. 13
    Martin Davies

    On the other hand, what are your other taxes like Dean?
    We pay a fortune in fuel tax but not a fortune elsewhere because of it.

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