'Dark day for drivers' as petrol prices hit record high
Consumer Editor Chris Choi on what motoring organisations called a "dark day for drivers" which will "hurt many household budgets".
Prices at the petrol pumps reached an all-time high on Sunday, while diesel is still a little short of its previous record, according to new data.
The average UK price of petrol hit 142.94p, beating the former record, set in April 2012, by 0.46p.
Meanwhile, diesel prices reached 146.5p a litre, short of its all-time high of 147.93p.
AA fuel price spokesperson, Luke Bosdet, said: “Whether it’s down to oil producers, market speculators, Treasury taxes or struggling retailers trying to balance their margins, record pump prices must be saying to drivers with the means that it is time to make the switch to electric.
“As for poorer motorists, many of them now facing daily charges to drive in cities, there is no escape. It’s a return to cutting back on other consumer spending, perhaps even heating or food, to keep the car that gets them to work on the road.”
A 20-mile round trip today would cost around 25p for the driver of a small electric car with a cheap energy supplier. For someone driving a small petrol car the same journey would cost 10 times more, the AA said.
As a result, switching to electric could save drivers around £800 a year on fuel, it added.
The data is calculated by Experian Catalist and provided to the RAC and AA.
The latest figures are a major rise from the early days of the pandemic when the price of petrol collapsed to a low of 106.48p in May 2020.
The rebound is much quicker than the two-and-a-half years it took for prices to recover after the 2008 financial crash, the AA said.
In 2012, when the last record was set, the price of a barrel of oil had reached $117 (£85).
But today, the exchange rate between the pound and the dollar is lower, making it more expensive for British companies to buy coal.
Meanwhile, the price of ethanol, which is mixed into the UK’s petrol, has soared by 80% since 2012, the RAC said.
The price rises also came the weekend before 300,000 people in London’s new Ultra Low Emission Zone face a charge of £12.50 every day because their cars are old and emit too much carbon.