Price of diesel skyrockets more than 27 cents across N.L., stove oil up 30 cents in Lab West - Action News
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NL

Price of diesel skyrockets more than 27 cents across N.L., stove oil up 30 cents in Lab West

The adjustment is the result of a shortage of ultra-low sulphur kerosene, according to the Public Utilities Board, and puts the price of diesel at over $2.67 per litre on the Avalon Peninsula.

All other fuels are unaffected as diesel tops $2.67 per litre on Avalon

A yellow diesel pump sits in its holder at the gas station.
The price of diesel rose by over 27 cents per litre Saturday morning. (Robert Jones/CBC)

A "significant spike" in pricing benchmarks has shot the price of diesel up by over 27 cents per litre across NewfoundlandSaturday, according to the Public Utilities Board.

The unscheduled adjustment from the PUB puts the price of a litre of diesel at $2.673on the Avalon Peninsula.

Elsewhere in Newfoundland, the price is now $2.69 per litre on the Bonavista Peninsula, almost $2.70 in central Newfoundland, $2.73 on the Connaigre Peninsula, between $2.68 and $2.69 per litre in western Newfoundland and between $2.69 and $2.71on the Northern Peninsula.

Most of Labrador is unaffecteddue to a seasonal price freeze, but customers in Labrador West and Churchill Falls are impacted by the increase. The price of diesel in the regions isnow $2.738 per litre and $276.4 per litre, respectively.

Residents of Labrador West and Churchill Falls are also seeing a major increase in the price of stove oil Saturday, where the costis up 30.92 cents per litre.

The price of stove oil is now over $2.14 per litre in Labrador West and $2.16 per litre in Churchill Falls. All other regions in the province aren't subject to the increase.

The adjustment is due toa shortage of ultra-low sulphur kerosene and a spike in benchmark pricingas a result. Ultra-low sulphur kerosene is a productblended into low-sulphur diesel to prevent thickening in freezing cold conditions.

According to the PUB, ultra-low sulphur kerosene makes up 75 per cent per cent of the benchmark price for the winter blend of diesel used in most of Newfoundland and Labrador and 100 per cent of the benchmark price for stove oil in Labrador.

All other fuels are unaffected in the unscheduled adjustment.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador