MEDIA ALERT: Report provides solution to critical risk of declining fuel reserves

Published: 3 Dec 2018

With less than three weeks of liquid fuel reserves, Australia risks grinding to a halt following a global economic shock or conflict along a major trade route, but a new report outlines a potential solution that would cost consumers less than a cent per litre.

 

Australia’s Fuel Security: Running on Empty, written by former Director of the Maritime Transport Policy Centre at the Australian Maritime College John Francis, will be released this morning in Parliament House, Canberra.

The report examines the policy and industry changes that have caused fuel supplies to fall to just a quarter of the International Energy Agency’s fuel stockholding obligation, along with costing a potential solution.

It also highlights that Australia is the only developed oil-importing country where there is no government controlled stock of crude oil or refined petroleum products, no mandated commercial stock requirements for oil companies, and no government involvement in oil markets.

Concerns over declining domestic production, diminishing refining capacity, and potential flashpoints in the Middle East and South China Sea forced the Turnbull government to announce in May that it would undertake a National Energy Security Assessment.

Mr Francis was commissioned by the Maritime Union of Australia to investigate Australia’s reliance on international ships for our liquid fuel supplies, estimate the number of tankers required to maintain supplies, and calculate the cost, per litre, of using Australian-owned and crewed tankers to maintain fuel supplies.

Launch: Australia’s Fuel Security: Running on Empty

When: 11.30am, Monday 3 December

Where: ALP Caucus Room, Parliament House

Who: Report author John Francis, Shadow Minister for Infrastructure and Transport Anthony Albanese, Maritime Union of Australia deputy national secretary Will Tracey, Construction Forestry Maritime Mining and Energy Union National secretary Michael O’Connor, and seafarers previously employed on Australian tankers.

Media contacts: Mich-Elle Myers 0401 202 667 or Tim Vollmer 0404 273 313

 



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Authorised by P Crumlin, Maritime Union of Australia, Sydney