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"description": "Australia imports 90 per cent of its fuel, leaving it vulnerable to energy shocks.",
"path": "/energy-lockdowns-down-under-like-covid/",
"publishedAt": "2026-03-26T23:00:33.000Z",
"site": "https://goodoil.news",
"tags": [
"Rebekah Barnett",
"Australia’s biggest wanker",
"issued a list of 10 smart-city style recommendations",
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"textContent": "Rebekah Barnett\n_Independent journalist reporting from Western Australia. BA Communications, Hons, University of Western Australia._\n\nThe spectre of lockdowns 2.0 looms as an Australian premier has called for “Covid-style” rules to manage the escalating fuel crisis sparked by the war in Iran.\n\nNew South Wales leader Chris Minns – whom Matt Taibbi once called “Australia’s biggest wanker” over his enthusiastic support for hate speech laws – recently said a “nationally consistent approach” was needed to implement measures such as fuel rationing and working from home.\n\nNSW Premier Chris Minns. Image: AAP / Dan Himbrechts.\n\nThis comes as petrol prices have soared up to $3 a litre and hundreds of fuel stations around the country are reportedly without diesel and unleaded fuel. Food security is in question as fishing trawlers grind to a halt, and farmers are unable to obtain fertiliser or operate machinery, and are fending off diesel theft.\n\nEnergy Minister Chris Bowen says the problem is not supply, but consumers running the fuel stations, like the toilet paper frenzy during Covid. Even if that is true, it won’t remain the case, given that Australia imports approximately 90 per cent of its fuel, and we have only 38 days worth of fuel in reserves.\n\nBowen has so far talked down the possibility of fuel rationing at the federal level, but state and territory governments could easily step in to enforce rations and other lockdown measures just as they did during Covid.\n\nEnergy Minister Chris Bowen. Image: NewsWire / Martin Ollman.\n\nLast Friday, the International Energy Agency (IEA) issued a list of 10 smart-city style recommendations, including remote working, road-use restrictions, reduced speed limits, and reduced air travel, which would essentially amount to ‘energy lockdowns’ if enforced by governments.\n\nIt’s enough to make a seasoned conspiracy theorist ponder the possibility of heightened surveillance and control via tech to ensure we don’t drive on the wrong day, purchase too many steaks, or exceed our allotted flight miles.\n\nAn opportunity perhaps for a Great Reset, mused very based Senator Alex Antic in parliament this week.\n\nMeanwhile, the situation has highlighted Australia’s vulnerability to energy supply shocks.\n\nWhile the Labor government has taken steps to ease the crisis – releasing some fuel reserves into the market, temporarily lowering diesel quality standards, setting up a taskforce to coordinate fuel distribution and planning – its response has been reactive, with limited effect. Fuel imports were said to have been secured, but shipments have already been cancelled.\n\nThere’s only so much you can do if you don’t produce or refine your own oil. Australia used to have eight oil refineries. We’re now down to two, and fossil fuel projects are increasingly hard to get up and running because of green and red tape.\n\nAt the same time, Australia produces an abundance of gas, but almost all of it is exported to foreign markets, tightening domestic supply and driving up prices.\n\nIn a sane world, this crisis would prompt our leaders to turn their attention to securing Australia’s energy supply, while simultaneously working to bring cleaner energy to market.\n\nBut going off our insane Covid response, I’m not betting on it.\n\n* * *\n\n_Advocacy group Stand Up Now Australia is running a petition to secure Australia’s fuel supply. Requests include cutting the fuel excise (we currently pay 52c tax for every litre of petrol), suspending the GST on fuel (tax on tax) and rebuilding Australia’s refining capacity._ Read and sign the petition here.\n\nThis article was originally published by Dystopian Down Under.",
"title": "Energy Lockdowns Down Under Like Covid?",
"updatedAt": "2026-03-26T23:00:32.879Z"
}