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Bowen on fuel - (Read 813 times)
lee
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Bowen on fuel -
Mar 4th, 2026 at 4:27pm
 
"    Energy Minister Chris Bowen has urged drivers not to panic-buy fuel, despite Australia holding barely half the oil reserve it is obliged to have in case of a global emergency.

    As long queues formed at petrol stations across the country, Bowen insisted Australia had ample supplies to handle the fallout from the Iran conflict, with a little over a month’s worth of petrol, diesel and jet fuel, based on normal consumption patterns, in addition to what is in service stations and vehicle fuel tanks."

https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/panic-buying-risks-petrol-supply-crunch-bow...

He wants to play the "not my fault" card, because ...?

BTW - I guess the solar proponents who insist that they cover the Sahara in solar panels have a backup plan?
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whiteknight
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #1 - Mar 4th, 2026 at 5:23pm
 
MEDIA RELEASE
Maritime Union Of Australia.
AUSTRALIA’S FUEL INSECURITY EXPOSED BY GLOBAL CONFLICT

3 MARCH 2026

The Maritime Union of Australia warns that Australia’s fuel security crisis has been laid bare by escalating international conflict and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most critical oil shipping routes.

This is not a distant geopolitical drama but a direct threat to Australian workers, families and industries. When a fifth of the world’s oil moves through a single maritime corridor and that corridor is shut by war, the consequences are immediate.

Australia is an energy exporting nation. It is indefensible that we cannot guarantee our own fuel supply. Fuel sovereignty is a national responsibility. The time for half measures has passed; decisive action is required now.

For decades, successive governments have allowed our domestic fuel capacity to be dismantled. Under the former Liberal–National Coalition government in particular, Australia’s strategic fuel reserves were effectively offshored, with public money spent storing fuel overseas rather than building sovereign stockpiles at home. At the same time, refinery after refinery closed. Despite once being a nation capable of refining and transporting own fuel, Australia has been reduced to being a price-taker in a volatile global market.

Today, Australia imports the overwhelming majority of its refined petrol and diesel. We rely on foreign refineries, foreign-owned tankers and shipping lanes that run through contested waters. Our fuel security buffer remains dangerously thin and for years fell short of the 90 day minimum stockholding obligation set by the International Energy Agency.

Fuel sovereignty is not an abstract policy debate. Diesel powers freight, agriculture, mining and construction. Petrol keeps essential workers moving. Aviation fuel connects our cities and regions. Without secure and accessible supplies, supermarket shelves will wind up bare, transport will grind to a halt, regional communities will be cut off and emergency services will be compromised. Running out of imported fuel during a global supply shock would not just drive up prices, it would stall the economy and threaten our entire economy.

“The closure of the Strait of Hormuz during the recent attacks on Iran is a stark warning of the volatility of Australia’s access to global fuel supply chains,” said the MUA’s National Secretary Jake Field.

“We mustn’t gamble our economic stability on uninterrupted access to foreign fuel markets. We cannot assume that geopolitical tensions will always resolve before our reserves run dry,” Mr Field added.

The Maritime Union of Australia calls on the Federal Government to act decisively and urgently.

The Union says that Australia must rebuild its sovereign fuel storage capacity onshore and maintain reserves that comfortably exceed international minimums and that we must protect and expand domestic refining capability to reduce reliance on imported finished fuels.

“We must realise the commitment of an Australian flagged and crewed strategic shipping capability that can guarantee delivery of essential energy supplies in times of crisis. Fuel security must be recognised as a pillar of national security, economic policy and social stability,” said Mr Field.

ENDS
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Frank
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #2 - Mar 4th, 2026 at 5:38pm
 
whiteknight wrote on Mar 4th, 2026 at 5:23pm:
MEDIA RELEASE
Maritime Union Of Australia.
AUSTRALIA’S FUEL INSECURITY EXPOSED BY GLOBAL CONFLICT

3 MARCH 2026

The Maritime Union of Australia warns that Australia’s fuel security crisis has been laid bare by escalating international conflict and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most critical oil shipping routes.

This is not a distant geopolitical drama but a direct threat to Australian workers, families and industries. When a fifth of the world’s oil moves through a single maritime corridor and that corridor is shut by war, the consequences are immediate.

Australia is an energy exporting nation. It is indefensible that we cannot guarantee our own fuel supply. Fuel sovereignty is a national responsibility. The time for half measures has passed; decisive action is required now.

For decades, successive governments have allowed our domestic fuel capacity to be dismantled. Under the former Liberal–National Coalition government in particular, Australia’s strategic fuel reserves were effectively offshored, with public money spent storing fuel overseas rather than building sovereign stockpiles at home. At the same time, refinery after refinery closed. Despite once being a nation capable of refining and transporting own fuel, Australia has been reduced to being a price-taker in a volatile global market.

Today, Australia imports the overwhelming majority of its refined petrol and diesel. We rely on foreign refineries, foreign-owned tankers and shipping lanes that run through contested waters. Our fuel security buffer remains dangerously thin and for years fell short of the 90 day minimum stockholding obligation set by the International Energy Agency.

Fuel sovereignty is not an abstract policy debate. Diesel powers freight, agriculture, mining and construction. Petrol keeps essential workers moving. Aviation fuel connects our cities and regions. Without secure and accessible supplies, supermarket shelves will wind up bare, transport will grind to a halt, regional communities will be cut off and emergency services will be compromised. Running out of imported fuel during a global supply shock would not just drive up prices, it would stall the economy and threaten our entire economy.

“The closure of the Strait of Hormuz during the recent attacks on Iran is a stark warning of the volatility of Australia’s access to global fuel supply chains,” said the MUA’s National Secretary Jake Field.

“We mustn’t gamble our economic stability on uninterrupted access to foreign fuel markets. We cannot assume that geopolitical tensions will always resolve before our reserves run dry,” Mr Field added.

The Maritime Union of Australia calls on the Federal Government to act decisively and urgently.

The Union says that Australia must rebuild its sovereign fuel storage capacity onshore and maintain reserves that comfortably exceed international minimums and that we must protect and expand domestic refining capability to reduce reliance on imported finished fuels.

“We must realise the commitment of an Australian flagged and crewed strategic shipping capability that can guarantee delivery of essential energy supplies in times of crisis. Fuel security must be recognised as a pillar of national security, economic policy and social stability,” said Mr Field.

ENDS



For once I agree with the union.

We should have our own totally self sufficient energy supply - oil, gas, nuclear and coal.

You don't need to invade Australia, you just need to cut off Singapore, Korea and Japan.


But who would do that, eh?  Not our chinky poo  friends, shurely. Tsk, tsk  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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lee
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #3 - Mar 4th, 2026 at 6:17pm
 
In 2020 Australia had 81 days reserve.

"The latest Australian Petroleum Statistics showed Australia had as much as 81 days' worth of oil reserves at the end of February."

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-04-24/explainer3a-australia27s-oil-purchase/121...

"Australia has over 30 days of fuel reserves, highest in more than a decade"

https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/australia-tells-consumers-no-need-panic-...

In January it was 28 days.

Fuel is fuel, whether petrol, diesel or jet fuel.

Of course he may not be aware of that. So IF he meant them separately that would be 102 days of fuel reserves, up from 81 in 2020. That is not that significant. Roll Eyes
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #4 - Mar 4th, 2026 at 6:19pm
 
I don’t understand the problem.  Angus Taylor has zillions of litres of oil in a bunker in the USA.  Should be a breeze getting it here.  We know Angus would have done all the groundwork in case we needed it.   Thank the Lord the Adults were in Charge
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lee
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #5 - Mar 4th, 2026 at 6:22pm
 
Vic wrote on Mar 4th, 2026 at 6:19pm:
Should be a breeze getting it here.



Weill it wouldn't be coming via the Straits of Hormuz, would it. Wink
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #6 - Mar 4th, 2026 at 6:36pm
 
There's already panic buying of petrol in the UK.

Queues spotted at UK petrol stations amid fuel price hike fears - 'fill up now'

Quote:
Fuel stations are descending into chaos over fears that petrol and diesel costs could staggeringly rise.


And... there's nothing like a huge front page story in today's The West Australian to get Perth motorists panic buying petrol (and also buying lots of newspapers, of course).

It said petrol could be as much as $2.07 a litre today although I noticed the Shell service station near Belmont Forum was still about $1.75 a litre this morning.

Glad I got rid of my car 6 months ago.  Smiley

Now, I'd better check and see how much toilet paper I have.  Roll Eyes
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #7 - Mar 4th, 2026 at 11:22pm
 
[quote author=bigvicfella link=1772605622/4#4 date=1772612399]I don’t understand the problem.  Angus Taylor has zillions of litres of oil in a bunker in the USA.  Should be a breeze getting it here.  We know Angus would have done all the groundwork in case we needed it.   Thank the Lord the Adults were in Charge[/quote]


Oh dear, was he the one behind one of the worst decisions ever made by an Australian government?

We not only paid for that petroleum but also entered into along term costly lease to have our emergency fuel reserves stored on the other side of the pacific in what is now an increasingly hostile to Australia country!

“ 'Fantastic. Great move. Well done Angus'”

Quote Angus.

No wonder voters are leaving the LNP in droves!
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #8 - Mar 5th, 2026 at 6:38am
 
"Energy Minister Chris Bowen has urged drivers not to panic-buy fuel"

Well - that'll start the gold rush..... and I hear toilet paper is streaking off the shelves again... WTF is this obsession with toilet paper?

We are truly governed by idiots.
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #9 - Mar 5th, 2026 at 1:17pm
 
I wasn’t overly concerned until I heard both old Airbus and blackout saying everything was fine and no need to worry.

Now  I am worried and will be filling up the car daily as well as filling up my jerrycans.

I am now definitely going grocery shopping as well.

The moment an Australian politician tells you anything you immediately need to take notice, understand that they are lies and do the exact opposite to protect  yourself and family and friends.
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #10 - Mar 5th, 2026 at 1:54pm
 
The reason for the stoppage of tankers through strait of Hormuz is not mines or threat of attack, but because the insurance companies have cancelled the cover for any ship making the transit. This is because new EU regulations require vast cash reserves to be held by companies to cover every possible loss, which these companies don't have.  Fortunately the US government has offered reasonably priced insurance and navy escorts for all ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz, so the fuel should be flowing again fairly soon.
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #11 - Mar 5th, 2026 at 2:32pm
 
https://www.news.com.au/world/middle-east/usiran-war-live-updates/live-coverage/...

“ US-Iran war live updates: ‘Large explosion’, oil spill off Kuwait after tanker hit

A commercial tanker has been hit with oil spilling everywhere in the Middle East hot zone, confirming analysts worst fears about trade routes and collateral damage.”



Yes,  nothing to see here. Carry on ….
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #12 - Mar 5th, 2026 at 2:47pm
 
Daves2017 wrote on Mar 5th, 2026 at 2:32pm:
https://www.news.com.au/world/middle-east/usiran-war-live-updates/live-coverage/...

“ US-Iran war live updates: ‘Large explosion’, oil spill off Kuwait after tanker hit

A commercial tanker has been hit with oil spilling everywhere in the Middle East hot zone, confirming analysts worst fears about trade routes and collateral damage.”



Yes,  nothing to see here. Carry on ….



War is peace.
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #13 - Mar 5th, 2026 at 5:16pm
 
Didnt 3 out the five oil refineries we had close under LNP ?
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lee
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Re: Bowen on fuel -
Reply #14 - Mar 5th, 2026 at 5:30pm
 
Wasn't the war on fossil fuels started by the left?
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