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Results 1 to 15 of 19
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1st November 2005, 06:43 PM #1
Petrol prices - just the facts...
Sad but true...I've recorded every petrol puchase I've made since 1990. :eek: Finally got around to graphing the numbers (see attached pdf doc). Look's like we all got a really good deal in the 1990's.
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1st November 2005, 06:56 PM #2
Soooo?
Its keeping up with cpi?
So what?
Al :confused:
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1st November 2005, 07:40 PM #3
Thanks Oz (and simplico)!
My kids often tell me how hard it is with the price of petrol etc, and I use exactly that graph to show them that they are no worse off!
If the Government was fair dinkum, it'd bung a 50% surcharge on petrol, and USE the money to build a serious public transport infrastructure.
That way, just the rich blokes like Oz and I would have the roads to ourselves!
Cheers,
P
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1st November 2005, 08:10 PM #4
Have a friend just back from Germany, it's 1.3E/L over there, that's about $2.10AU.
Just be thankfull that your car doesn't run on Coke.
What about the good old days.... in September 1976 I went to Adelaide & was surprised to see that they were paying 13.2cents/litre, it was only 12.8cents/litre back in Brissy at the time.
Back then it cost a $1.65 for a pack of Marlboro Red, a bottle of soft drink & a sandwich. (lunch)
Cliff.
If you find a post of mine that is missing a pic that you'd like to see, let me know & I'll see if I can find a copy.
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1st November 2005, 08:17 PM #5
And they say the gulf wars aren't about oil - give me a break!!!!
I believe the CPI is being generated by the price of oil not the other way aroundThere was a young boy called Wyatt
Who was awfully quiet
And then one day
He faded away
Because he overused White
Floorsanding in Canberra and Albury.....
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1st November 2005, 09:11 PM #6
Originally Posted by namtrak
I've been thinking about that lately, in so far as it effects me, so here goes:
Fuel has gone up by around 25% or say 30c per litre (for simplicity), now if a car gets 10l / 100 k, that's an extra 3c per k, so if the real cost of running that car is say 85c or so per k, total running costs have gone up by something less than 3.5%.
Given that transport (trucks etc) should be many, many times more efficient (in a cost per kg carried sense), we start to get interesting figures:
Let's say we have a business with an extra-ordinarily high freight cost of 10% of our turnover (this is so high as to be absurd!) and let's give trucks the benefit of the doubt and apply the same increase as our car has cost us (it's probably less than half that in reality), then the increase cost to our business is 3.5% of 10% or .0035% (or maybe I've got one 0 too many in there) but in any case, it's not huge at all.
What we are seeing at the moment, is companies who have absolutely no idea what the real costs are, adding arbitary "fuel levies" and making a big bonus.
Next time a courier charges you an extra "fuel levy" ask him how he can justify it on a per parcel basis?
Cheers,
P
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2nd November 2005, 03:19 AM #7
Wanna complain about the price of petrol?...check the price next time you buy a litre of spring water.
I find it hard to believe that producing a litre of water costs more than producing a litre of petrol.....you dont need an oil rig costing $90,000 a day and a $10 million per well budget to pull water out of the ground. You dont need a multi million dollar refinery to get water from a well to the market place.
Something doesnt gel here.Whatever note you blow youre never more than a semitone away from the correct one....(Miles Davis)
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2nd November 2005, 07:06 AM #8
What are you guys on about.. :confused:
Petrol is not that expensive where I am..all I pay is .55c per liter
Mind you that is bowser price less fleet discount (lease car) then take into account I am paying pre-tax (48.5 cents for tax, salary sacricfe) so for me its not soo expensive.
I hate to think how I will cope once the lease expiresI try and do new things twice.. the first time to see if I can do it.. the second time to see if I like it
Kev
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2nd November 2005, 08:20 AM #9
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2nd November 2005, 09:01 AM #10
Originally Posted by bitingmidge
Like your saying given the fuel prices are only rising around 5% for a freight company and fuel only accounts for say somewhere around 10-15% of overall costs then a price rise on any given item should be around .5% That is, by my basic (possibly an understatement) maths a 3 litre carton of milk should rise from around $2.90 to about $2.93 and that should cover fuel costs across the production of the carton.
CheersThere was a young boy called Wyatt
Who was awfully quiet
And then one day
He faded away
Because he overused White
Floorsanding in Canberra and Albury.....
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2nd November 2005, 09:36 AM #11
Originally Posted by kiwigeo
That being said I agree - bottled water is a ripoff. In a country with perfectly drinkable tap water it is also unnecessary!
A bit offtopic - there was a test done in South Africa a few years back when bottled "spring" water started becomming popular. The tests found traces of ecoli bacteria in all the bottled water. Only water that tested ecoli free was the tap water because it had clorine in it! So if you enjoy drinking $hit then go for that bottled water!
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2nd November 2005, 10:04 AM #12
What worries me the most with the petrol prices is that no one is taking into account the AUD/USD fx rate !!!
If you do nothing makes sense, oil goes up and AUD get's stronger by roughly same percent and we still end up paying a lot more.
Overall the oil price has risen, but from 01-02 to now the USD has lost about 35-40% and crude has not gone up around 30-40% so someone is making a huge profit somewhere.
nic
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7th November 2005, 04:31 AM #13
Originally Posted by anthonyd
Right now I'm at work sitting out on an oil rig looking for the stuff they make petrol from. Just to have this rig sitting here doing nothing would set you back about $80,000 a day. Add in all the extras and daily costs for drilling a well sky rocket to about $250,000 a day. Start looking for oil in deep water and your rig day rate can hit as high as $300,000 a day (base rate).
The above is just a fraction of the cost of producing a litre of petrol from a barrel of oil. You've then got shipping and refining costs.
As for 1000's of trucks running up the mountain and collecting it.....youre not far wrong. More than one major operator in the Adelaide Hills does virtually that. Up the mountain to a spring, truck it to a plant and stick it in bottles. Alot less complicated than turning oil into petrol.
Cheers MartinWhatever note you blow youre never more than a semitone away from the correct one....(Miles Davis)
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7th November 2005, 07:47 AM #14
Originally Posted by bitingmidge
Originally Posted by kiwigeo
Mick
avantguardian
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7th November 2005, 09:40 AM #15
Given that oil is a finite and declining resource, I'd make two points:
a. The price of petrol is quite reasonable in Oz
b. In a couple of years we'll all be looking back to 2005 and saying how cheap it was.
There are a few methods of setting RRP's. The two main are cost plus and market. In the former you look at your costs to develop, produce, market and deliver and put a % mark up on top. The second is simply charging what people (market) will pay.
I know little about the oil business, but I presume fuel prices are based (loosely) on the former and bottled water on the second. I never cease to be surprised by the number of idiots there are in the world. One can never underestimate the gullibility of the consumer. Marketers know this, hence the price of bottled water. Strange but true - if you dropped the price, you'd probably sell less (water not petrol). Diminished wank factor.Bodgy
"Is it not enough simply to be able to appreciate the beauty of the garden without it being necessary to believe that there are faeries at the bottom of it? " Douglas Adams
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