Thursday, April 16, 2026
Privacy-First Edition
Back to NNN
World

Victorian fuel prices could spike by 20c a litre due to Geelong refinery fire, experts warn

A fire which broke out at Viva Energy’s oil facility near Geelong late on Wednesday burned for about 13 hours before being extinguished, with potential effects on Victoria fuel prices and supply. Photograph: Jay Kogler/AAPView image in fullscreenA fire which broke out at Viva Energy’s oil facility near Geelong late on Wednesday burned for about 13 hours before being extinguished, with potential effects on Victoria fuel prices and supply. Photograph: Jay Kogler/AAPVictorian fuel prices could spike by 20c a litre due to Geelong refinery fire, experts warnSome petrol stations may see short-term fuel outages as refinery output slows, but national supplies should not be affected

Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates

Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast

Victorian motorists are being warned to brace for a spike in petrol prices of up to 20c a litre due to a huge blaze at Viva Energy’s oil refinery in Geelong, but oil and supply chain experts say the effects should be short-lived.

Viva’s Corio facility is one of two domestic refineries that reduce Australia’s heavy reliance on direct imports of ready-to-use oil products from Asia.

A fire which broke out at the facility late on Wednesday burned for about 13 hours before being extinguished, and authorities have warned the full extent of the damage is still unknown.

Read moreVictoria could see unleaded prices rise as much as 20c a litre and more service stations face temporary fuel outages, according to Vlado Vivoda, honorary fellow at the University of Queensland’s sustainable minerals institute.

“I don’t think there’s going to be an actual shortage, but [oil and fuel] tankers move very slowly … it takes time to bring extra cargos,” Vivoda said.

He said national prices and supply should not be affected as other states are importing fuel to meet their needs.

The Geelong refinery can turn crude oil into petrol, diesel, jet fuel and some speciality products that are piped or shipped to storage terminals, and end up at service stations and with commercial customers, including airlines and road transport companies.

Most of the fuel refined in Geelong stays in Victoria, providing about 50% of the state’s petrol supply, according to David Leaney, a supply chain specialist at the Australian National University.

0:50Geelong fire: major blaze breaks out at Australia's Viva oil refinery – videoLeaney said there could be a “short term price spike and short term availability issues” contained to Victoria.

“It’s going to impact Victorian petrol supply, but we are talking about weeks not months, subject to the repair and re-establishment of supply from the refinery,” Leaney said.

The federal energy minister, Chris Bowen, has said petrol, diesel and jet fuel continued to be produced at the refinery at reduced levels as a safety precaution. Specifically, he said there would be an impact on petrol production.

The fire comes at a sensitive time for Australia, given there has been a huge increase in oil prices triggered by the Middle East conflict, and there are enduring concerns over supplies given the fragile state of the US and Iran ceasefire.

While Viva operates the largest fuel and convenience network in Australia under its OTR, Reddy Express and Liberty brands, many of those stations located outside Victoria, including in NSW, rely on imported petrol.

Viva also sells through Shell via a brand licence agreement.

Read moreLurion de Mello, energy economist at Macquarie University, said the loss of supply in Victoria could force the federal government to authorise fuel companies to release more of their minimum stockholding, as it did in March.

“Any extra supply that’s released from the wholesale to the retail level, I think that will definitely help with the prices and so forth,” de Mello said.

Orders of crude oil to the Geelong refinery could also be redirected if it was left unable to process them into fuels, de Mello said.

Tracking data showed shipments of oil from the US, Argentina and Algeria were en route to Geelong on Thursday morning.

Shares in Viva Energy entered into a trading halt early on Thursday, pending an announcement from the company on the extent of the damage to the refinery, and anticipated disruption to petrol supplies.

Australia’s two refineries – the second is located in Brisbane and operated by Ampol – produce about one-third of Australia’s petrol requirements.

Read original at The Guardian

The Perspectives

0 verified voices · Three viewpoints · Real discourse

Left
0
Be the first to share a left perspective
Center
0
Be the first to share a center perspective
Right
0
Be the first to share a right perspective

Related Stories