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"Particularly appalling": Petrol prices set to soar before long weekend

<div class="post_body_wrapper"> <div class="post_body"> <div class="body_text redactor-styles redactor-in"> <p>Petrol prices are set to soar as Aussies get prepared for the long weekend.</p> <p>Peter Khoury from the NRMA in Sydney told<span> </span><em>Today</em><span> </span>that most capital cities will see prices above 140 cents a litre, and branded the hike "appalling".</p> <p>"It's particularly appalling," Mr Khoury said, adding "I would be social distancing myself from all companies from the next week or so at least.</p> <p>"The price cycles in Australia are now defying gravity. They are going up three times faster than they fall.</p> <p>"It's absurd in the middle of a pandemic to be doing this when we know so many families are struggling. I'm lost for words, to be honest."</p> <p>Sydney is tipped to hit 145 cents a litre, while both Brisbane and Melbourne will see prices of 150 cents a litre.</p> <p>Perth will hit 137.5 cents a litre and Adelaide is a bit lower hitting 139.2 a litre.</p> <p>Canberra and Hobart will hit 125.0 cents a litre and Darwin will have the nation's lowest prices at 119.2 cents a litre.</p> <p>Mr Khoury urged shoppers to use fuel comparison apps to get the most bang for their buck.</p> <p>"We're getting ripped off," he said.</p> <p>"In every one of those cities, there are a whole bunch of servos that are still sitting between $1 and $1.10 some $1.15, go and find them. Fill up there.</p> <p>"Drive past the $1.50 servos, don't give them your business, go to the cheaper servos... as long as we put our money into those servos we will keep having some degree of competition."</p> </div> </div> </div>

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Petrol prices to drop amid coronavirus outbreak

<p>Petrol prices could drop to as low as $1 a litre across Australia after Saudi Arabia started an oil price war with Russia.</p> <p>Global oil prices are expected to continue falling after Saudi Arabia and Russia failed to agree on oil production targets over the weekend, prompting Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to announce an increase in the country’s production from nine million barrels to 11 million barrels per day.</p> <p>Brent crude prices dipped 29 per cent from US$45 a barrel on Friday to US$32 a barrel on Monday.</p> <p>Some analysts predict oil prices could plummet to US$20 per barrel.</p> <p>The prices were already under pressure from COVID-19, which had reduced demand from China.</p> <p>Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said on Monday he had asked the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission to monitor the prices at the bowser.</p> <p>“They have assured me that they will not only maintain their monitoring role and the vigilance that that involves, but they’ll also be calling out any energy companies that don’t pass on the reduction in the wholesale price to the Australian consumer,” Frydenberg said.</p> <p>NRMA spokesperson Peter Khoury said the plunge was “certainly positive for motorists”.</p> <p>“We think the next [price drop] in the capital cities will be about 10 cents a litre for regular unleaded,” he told <em><a href="https://thenewdaily.com.au/finance/consumer/2020/03/09/oil-price-petrol-collapse/">The New Daily</a></em>.</p>

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Look at your mobile phone while crossing the road? You could be slapped with a $200 fine

<p>There have been renewed calls for the government to introduce a $200 fine for pedestrians distracted by their phones while crossing the road.</p> <p>The Pedestrian Council of Australia is pushing for a national legislation to deter people from using their devices or noise-cancelling headphones while crossing a street.</p> <p>Under the proposal, pedestrians would be hit with the fine even if they were crossing on a pedestrian green light.</p> <p>The organisation’s chairman Harold Scruby said the penalty – which was to be called “cross road while distracted” – would help minimise the risk of accidents.</p> <p>“A lot of people say if they [pedestrians] are going to be stupid, it’s their problem but the fact is the cost of road trauma per annum is about $30 billion and much of that is pedestrian trauma,” said Scruby.</p> <p>“At the moment there’s no stopping people wearing noise-cancelling headphones and stepping out on a pedestrian crossing or a green light without looking, listening, stopping, thinking … They’re not aware of the imminent danger surrounding them.”</p> <p>Scruby added, “We’ve spent 8-10 years advertising, now it’s time for enforcement.”</p> <p>According to the NRMA’s latest <a rel="noopener" href="https://www.mynrma.com.au/-/media/documents/advocacy/look-up-keeping-pedestrians-safe.pdf" target="_blank"><em>Look Up</em></a> report, over one in three pedestrians in Sydney are behaving like “smombies” or “smartphone zombies” by crossing the road while looking at their phones or wearing earphones.</p> <p>Pedestrian trauma accounts for 17 per cent of all deaths on NSW roads. Almost half – or 48 per cent – of the pedestrians killed on the road were aged 60 or more.</p> <p>“Statistics already show that the elderly, very young and those who have been drinking are already at risk when crossing the road, so adding 'smombies' to the list only further enhances the need to crack down on this behaviour,” said NRMA Road Safety Expert Dimitra Vlahomitros.</p> <p>This is not the first time the pedestrian council has called for a regulatory measure to improve pedestrians’ behaviour. Last year, Scruby told <a rel="noopener" href="https://www.9news.com.au/national/queensland-pedestrian-mobile-phones-fines-safety-measures/e26d068b-699d-418e-ac51-8f5a9cdd5aa2" target="_blank"><em>9News</em></a> the proposed $200 fine would be an appropriate penalty to encourage vigilance.</p> <p>“The fine for not wearing a bicycle helmet in NSW is $450,” he said. “When you put it in perspective $200 is pretty cheap.”</p> <p>In November, Queensland’s Transport and Main Roads Minister, Mark Bailey, said the State Government was not looking at introducing new fines for distracted pedestrians.</p> <p>Distracted walking laws have been applied in <a rel="noopener" href="https://www.citylab.com/life/2019/05/texting-safety-tips-distracted-walking-laws-nyc-vision-zero/589606/" target="_blank">several cities in the US</a>, including Honolulu in Hawaii, Montclair in California, and Rexburg in Idaho.</p>

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