Have you ever been to Alice Springs? Well, if you have you will know that the Alice is the heart of Australia in more ways than one. If you haven’t, then you should join the thousands of overseas visitors who regularly flock to the Alice.

Petrol is so expensive in The Alice, it makes more sense to get around on these. Pic: Angelo Soulas.

You will be in awe of many things in the Alice, especially when you see how a community in the middle of Australia can, in so many ways, be a microcosm of our country.

The Alice has all the great personalities you get in the big cities. There are the talk show presenters at Radio 8HA like Adrian Renzi, or “Renz” to his friends, who are great at expressing the public indignation on issues of importance to the local community. There is, of course, the local ABC Radio Station where presenters like Breakfast Show host, Stewart Brash, start the locals thinking about the day’s big issues.

Now you know there’s a really big issue in town when the talk show and the ABC presenters share the same level of outrage on the issue. It may not happen often but it did happen recently when I was invited by the Alice Springs Town Council to visit the Alice to talk about petrol prices.

It was an invitation I was pleased to accept and while in town I saw first hand what makes Alice Springs so special. As a destination the Alice can be described as “real Australia”. It’s hot, it’s surrounded by desert and it has people who are proud of their town. Yes, the Alice has its challenges, but it faces them as effectively as it can.

It’s got plenty of modern history too with the Ghan passing through town. There’s the Old Ghan Train Railway Museum and National Road Transport Hall of Fame where you can see lots of Australian transport history in one place.

There’s a thriving solar power presence where the frequent sunny days are used to generate electricity for local use. There’s a solar power station, and solar power initiatives at the airport and the Crowne Plaza Hotel in town. So in the Alice you can see both the past and the future as it impacts on all Australians.

As for the people, the personalities are larger than life. They’re passionate about their town and lifestyle. They’re also not afraid to speak up if they see there’s something not quite right and that’s where the petrol pricing issue comes in.

Everything in the Alice is on a grand scale. The people have big hearts. The surrounding desert is a big place as you see when flying in. The town is bordered by the big and stunning MacDonnell Ranges, and during the floods the Todd River that runs through town can become a torrent.

Given how big everything is in the Alice it’s not surprising that even the consumer rip offs are big. Having closely followed petrol prices in the Alice for many years there’s no doubt in one’s mind that Alice Springs motorists are regularly ripped off.

Late last year, for example, the wholesale price for petrol dropped sharply, but the retail petrol prices in the Alice defied gravity. While petrol prices around Australia were falling, retail prices in the Alice remained as high and as flat as the surrounding desert.

However, when wholesale prices start to rise this year, the retail prices in the Alice started to rise as quickly as the Todd River can rise during a flood.

Why the petrol rip off? It’s as simple as there being a lack of strong price competitive independents in Alice Springs. The petrol retailers in town seem to act as a cosy club. They follow each other’s prices and have no interest in undercutting one another’s prices as the retail profit margins they enjoy can be very big.

Where the difference between the wholesale price in Darwin and the retail price in the Alice can be up to 30 cents a litre there’s certainly lots of room to make a big retail profit. Yes, there are transport costs but you know there’s something wrong when retail prices in Alice are higher than other centres in the Northern Territory such as Tennant Creek and even Katherine.

The feeling of something being wrong gets even stronger when you realise that retail prices in Katherine are generally lower than those in Darwin despite the petrol having to be transported down the Highway to Katherine.

How do we get retail prices down in the Alice? Well, the so-called Petrol Commissioner could visit the Alice and have a chat with the petrol retailers. The Alice Springs petrol retailers are a quiet and reserved lot and don’t really want to talk to outside commentators about why Alice Springs petrol prices are so high.

That’s why the Federal petrol cop on the beat – the Petrol Commissioner that was introduced by Chris Bowen back in October 2008 – should visit Alice Springs. Nothing like high visibility policing to get the message through that rip offs won’t be tolerated. Surely if I can make it out to the Alice so can the Petrol Commissioner.

What else can be done to put downward pressure on petrol prices in the Alice? Well, the Alice Springs Town Council could invite a new independent petrol retailer into town. The Council could offer financial or other incentives to get a new retailer to take on the cosy club.

The Council could also enter into a commercial arrangement or joint venture with a new independent petrol retailer. That would minimise the risk for the new entrant just in case the cosy club put the heat on a new entrant. It’s good to have friends and the Alice Springs Town Council would be a powerful friend given that the Council could shift its own petrol purchases for Council vehicles to the new entrant.

In fact, all Town Councils across the Northern Territory (and around Australia) could enter into a collective bargaining arrangement whereby they could collectively negotiate for bulk purchases of petrol at lower prices. Town Councils would be well placed to get together to get cheaper petrol prices.

By being able to get cheaper prices through collective bargaining Northern Territory Town Councils would even be able to open their own petrol stations to keep the cosy club honest.

Will the Northern Territory Town Councils stand up for long suffering motorists? Time will tell, but if they are half as visionary as the pioneers that opened up the Northern Territory they will do their very best to show the leadership on the issue that’s so often missing from Canberra.

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18 comments

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    • Robin Henry says:

      12:39pm | 28/03/12

      I’m currently spending a couple of weeks in Bali where the petrol price is $0.50 AUD equivalent per L. I can’t help but think we are being screwed with the prices we pay not only in The Alice, but all over Australia.

      The Federal Government levies several taxes on fuel and they are the same in the bush as they are in the leafy, overpopulated suburbs of Sydney. There’s obviously some opportunity for relief for those living in far away places where fuel is more important for transport.

      Ultimately though, we should be trying to find alternative sources and methods of propulsion that reduce our dependance on OPEC and the transfer of money to countries hell bent on our ultimate destruction or at least submission to totalitarianism.

    • Joe says:

      01:33pm | 28/03/12

      Robin,

      The price of fuel is cheaper in Indonesia because the Indonesian government subsidizes fuel in Indonesia.  Last year they spent about 21 Billion US on this subsidy and they will be spending a fair bit more in 2012 even despite the drop in subsidy set to be implemented on April 1st.

      Expect to see some major protests around this time in Indonesia and ultimately the Indonesian government backing down and deciding to kick the can down the road just like they did in Nigeria earlier this year.

    • Joe says:

      12:24pm | 28/03/12

      May be we are beginning to see the real reason for the intervention…  Sky rocketing fuel prices.  Which is linked to peak oil, that is peak easy to get sweet light crude.  Maintaining all those outback communities would have become very, very expensive to maintain when petrol and diesel hits 5 dollars a litre.

    • MattyC says:

      11:15am | 28/03/12

      Having grown up in Alice, i can assure you that it has always been this way.

      They were paying in excess of a dollar for fuel close to 15 years ago when prices around the country were in the 60 - 70 c mark.

      IMHO Alice Springs is a beautiful example of something that has been discussed here previously that Australians are charged what the market will pay.

      You live 1500km from the nearest town that is larger than yours and a couple hundred to the next fuel stop. There is a limited bus service for the suburban area, a cool day in summer is in the high 30’s, below 0 temps in the winter. You are by definition a captive market and you need a car - you will pay $2 or $3 per litre if the price went there.

    • no more gillard says:

      10:37am | 28/03/12

      Petrol prices too high the government needs to fix it now. Gillard must go!

    • youdy beaudy says:

      03:14pm | 28/03/12

      @ no more gillard.When Keating got out petrol was about 75c per litre from memory. When Howard got out it was $ 1.30 per litre. So, that’s a big increase and under howards watch.

      Can’t blame everything on Gillard and Co. Naughty, Naughty.!!

    • Stella says:

      03:07pm | 28/03/12

      Surely you are being sarcastic.

      No-one in their right mind would advocate for government intrusion into every area of our lives.

    • PW says:

      03:53pm | 28/03/12

      I wish there was an endless supply of the stuff down there. But there’s not. I haven’t seen anyone anywhere argue that oil is a limitless resource.

      While denial might seem like an attractive alternative, it will only make the reality harsher when it does come. Preparation is needed, one means of preparation (since a viable alternative has not yet been found) is making the stuff cost more in the hope we’ll use less. Which is pretty much what is gradually happening.

    • Mikey says:

      03:04pm | 28/03/12

      @PW so keep saying it until its right? Yep, that’ll work.

    • The Other Martin says:

      02:48pm | 28/03/12

      Peak oil is not primarily about oil running out. Peak oil is about crude being more expensive to extract. The cheap and easy stuff was extracted long ago. What is left is the hard stuff - hence more expensive. Look at the accident in the gulf a few years. They were drilling down kilometers under the ocean with all the difficulty and cost that implies. Why? Because that is where the available oil is. Peak oil is about the certainty of increasing demand (as India/China/Brazil etc grow) and the certainty of reducing supply. It means much higher prices and a brake on economic growth.

    • jase says:

      02:22pm | 28/03/12

      Doom and Gloom.. Publicised by people who usually stand to benefit from an alternative, fear is after all a very good sales machine.

      Peak Oil for crude - Maybe, and thats a big maybe as we are sitting on large reserves that currently cannot be accessed due to native issues. Oil companies will always publish lower reserves than they actually have to keep the pricing as profitable as possible. That is simply business.

      Peak Oil for synthetic alternatives - No chance, they have been swept under the rug until the oil companies have milked crude for all that its worth.

      The likes of Chevron, BP and what not are not going to let the world come to a standstill, it defeats the purpose of being in business. They are very good strategists however and will ensure that they get every cent possible from the current investments they have.

    • Shane From Melbourne says:

      11:32am | 28/03/12

      @Sheik and Fries- My exponential global population and finite oil resources beats your chicken little name calling anytime

    • PW says:

      09:21am | 28/03/12

      “Peak oil? Didn’t they say that almost a decade ago?”

      I’m sure they did. Are you suggesting that because someone ten years ago said that the world would sooner or later run out of oil, and that it hasn’t happened yet, that it never will?

    • Sheik and fries says:

      09:04am | 28/03/12

      Peak oil?

      Didn’t they say that almost a decade ago?

      Chicken littles

    • youdy beaudy says:

      06:23am | 28/03/12

      Just thinking about it. Maybe the Federals could reduce the excise on petrol and diesel and make it cheaper. Maybe they might wake up feeling generous one day and reduce rip off excises for all of us and make it cheaper Australia wide. Just thinking tho. And that is all we can really do about it, think and wish.

      Oh, while they are there they could reduce the excise on Alcohol and Tobacco as well and stop the rip off for good. We should take up religion and pray a lot. But Jesus would reduce it wouldn’t he?. Let’s vote for him in the next election. Yes, we would need Jesus on our side to change things in the lucky country.

      Now hang on a bit that is not Politically correct. We will also need Allah as well. Jihad on petrol prices anyone.!

    • PW says:

      09:06am | 28/03/12

      Maybe while they are at it they can abolish income tax, GST, stamp duty, payroll tax and company tax. And increase th dole and pensions while they are at it. Jusat make the gum leaf legal tender, there vare plenty of them about.

    • PW says:

      09:05am | 28/03/12

      Maybe while they are at it they can abolish income tax, GST, stamp duty, payroll tax and company tax. And increase th dole and pensions while they are at it. Jusat make the gum leaf legal tender, there vare plenty of them about.

 

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