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It's not the Citi, it's the Sentra with town driving. The Citi is likely much higher as it's my go-kart. I can actually check...As I recall those Citi Golfs were heavy on fuel but that is a bit excessive
Bliksem, are you sure you aren't lugging around a pallet of bricks in the boot or something? Maybe some bodies, perlemoen, sinkers or something?It's not the Citi, it's the Sentra with town driving. The Citi is likely much higher as it's my go-kart. I can actually check...
The Citi is lighter than I thought. 371km since full tank (50L) and it's close to the bottom of reserve, so that's around 13.5L/100km.It's not the Citi, it's the Sentra with town driving. The Citi is likely much higher as it's my go-kart. I can actually check...
That R28 just became R34 from WednesdayWith the latest fuel price increases, has anyone changed their driving style/habits?
I am stretching my fuel as far as it can go by delaying trips for stuff that is not urgent, but still driving more or less the same as I was. R28.10 per litre of 50ppm does sting, though, but I am still averaging around 7L/100km with the Duster.

Yeah, fortunately I only go through a tank once every two or so months but it hurts everything since our economy is so dependent on road transport.That R28 just became R34 from Wednesday![]()
Indeed I am waiting courier guy email come though any minute about price increasesYeah, fortunately I only go through a tank once every two or so months but it hurts everything since our economy is so dependent on road transport.
Why has diesel become so much more expensive than petrol?View attachment 1905490
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Here is the official petrol price for May
The Department of Petroleum and Mineral Resources has published the official fuel price adjustments that will take effect on Wednesday, 6 May 2026.businesstech.co.za
The diesel price is unregulated in SA so there are no government-enforced prices in effectWhy has diesel become so much more expensive than petrol?
By that do you mean the Petrol price is artificially being kept lower than it should be?The diesel price is unregulated in SA so there are no government-enforced prices in effect
The retail diesel price is unregulated in SA so there are no government-enforced prices in effect.
In an ideal world one would think lower prices would prevail (healthy competition and all that) but who knows.By that do you mean the Petrol price is artificially being kept lower than it should be?
In an ideal world one would think lower prices would prevail (healthy competition and all that) but who knows.
There is probably some degree of collusion going on at some outlets? IDK, I remember years ago diesel and petrol prices used to be neck in neck (usually 5% or so within each other) but I have no idea what is going on nowadays and why there is a bigger price disparity between the products at the pumps.
In an ideal world one would think lower prices would prevail (healthy competition and all that) but who knows.
There is probably some degree of collusion going on at some outlets? IDK, I remember years ago diesel and petrol prices used to be neck in neck (usually 5% or so within each other) but I have no idea what is going on nowadays and why there is a bigger price disparity between the products at the pumps.
It would be interesting to do a deep dive into this, how much fuel oil is consumed to make a litre of petrol vs diesel and the respective consumption of our country.Isn't it because there is higher demand for diesel? Economies essentially run on diesel because it is used extensively in heavy industry and farming. Locally there are other factors, such us being reliant on trucked goods in light of the collapse of rail. Also, years of loadshedding leading to Eskom burning through it.
I also understand that diesel is has a more complex refinement process, and when there are global constraints on supply along with high demand, this leads to further price shocks.
Fair enough, I didn't think about that. I know in some areas 5ppm is a thing already.Some of it is down to emissions restrictions getting tighter and tighter and tighter, especially for diesel, refining costs are simply more to get 50ppm versus 500ppm diesel. And then you have the 10ppm stuff and lower in Europe for instance.
That's what I remember as well.In an ideal world one would think lower prices would prevail (healthy competition and all that) but who knows.
There is probably some degree of collusion going on at some outlets? IDK, I remember years ago diesel and petrol prices used to be neck in neck (usually 5% or so within each other) but I have no idea what is going on nowadays and why there is a bigger price disparity between the products at the pumps.