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Indicator Assessment

Transport fuel prices and taxes in Europe

Indicator Assessment
Prod-ID: IND-114-en
  Also known as: TERM 021
Published 16 Sep 2010 Last modified 11 May 2021
9 min read
This is an old version, kept for reference only.

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This page was archived on 09 Feb 2021 with reason: Other (Discontinued indicator)

Since 1980 the real price of transport fuel (all transport fuels, expressed as the equivalent consumption in unleaded petrol, corrected for inflation to 2005 prices) has fluctuated between 0.75 and 1.25 Euros per litre, with an average of 0.93 Euros. Prices reached a peak in summer 2008 and have since fallen considerably, though with a slight rise again in late 2009.  Its price at the end of September 2009 at 0.91 Euros is 7% lower than the price in 1980, 0.99 Euros. As the price of fuel is an important determinant of the demand for transport and the efficiency with which fuel is used, it is clear that price is not currently countering the impact of growth on transport demand.

Information on rail transport fuel prices and charges is not available.

Road transport fuel prices (including taxes) in EU Member States

Note: Road transport fuel prices (including taxes) in EU Member States

Data source:

Fuel price source 1980 - 1993. Quarterly values taken from original spreadsheet. http://ims.eionet.europa.eu/IMS/ISpecs/ISpecification20070821110939/full_spec
Fuel price source 1994 - 2005, Weekly values taken from Oil Bulletin. http://ec.europa.eu/energy/observatory/oil/bulletin_en.htm, http://ec.europa.eu/energy/observatory/oil/doc/time_series/time_series_country.zip 
Fuel price source 2006 onwards Weekly values taken from Oil Bulletin: http://ec.europa.eu/energy/observatory/oil/bulletin_en.htm, http://ec.europa.eu/energy/reports/Oil_Bulletin_Prices_History.xls 

While nominal prices of transport fuels have increased considerably, the real (inflation corrected with HICP, reference year 2005)) the average price of road fuel in the EU has increased only slightly during the last decade, apart from short periods of price increases due to political instabilities. The price in September 2009 was 7% lower than at the start of the data series in 1980,  but close to average price throughout the period of 0.93 Euros.
In the EU-15 Member States, the level of fuel prices and taxes is about 20% below the level in the Eastern European counties (excluding Romania and Bulgaria). However, the accession of the eastern European nations in 2004 did not lead to a reduction of the average fuel price as it occurred at a time of  rising crude oil prices.
In all Member States (except for the UK) diesel is taxed less than petrol, leading to lower prices, even though the external costs of diesel vehicles are on average higher than those of petrol vehicles (see TERM25 'External Costs of Transport'). This has contributed to a shift from petrol to diesel vehicles in recent decades.  In 1980, petrol accounted for about 70% and diesel for 30% of the fuel sales. More recently, the share of diesel was 58% and unleaded petrol about 42%. This is due to both a growth in road freight transport, and dieselification of the passenger vehicle fleet. 
Fuel prices can be used to assess and explain developments in transport demand, as they are closely linked through price elasticities of demand. Changes in the price of fuels can lead to a change in the demand for transport and also has a significant impact in the longer term on the efficiency of vehicles bought by the user.  Given that real fuel prices have, apart from short term fluctuations, remained relatively constant over a period during which there was considerable economic growth, it is clear that the price of fuel is not currently sending a strong message in favour of demand reduction and fuel efficiency.

Supporting information

Indicator definition

This indicator considers the price of fuel in the EU, including cost price, excise duty and VAT.

Definitions:

  • 'All petrol' is a consumption-weighted average price of both leaded and unleaded fuel, corrected using the energy-content of an equivalent amount of unleaded petrol.
  • 'All fuel, unleaded petrol equivalent' is a consumption-weighted average price of unleaded and leaded petrol and diesel, corrected using the energy content of an equivalent amount of unleaded petrol.
  • 'Nominal' is the price with no adjustment for inflation.
  • 'Real' is the price corrected for inflation, using 2015 as the baseline year.
  • 'Average, all fuel, unleaded petrol equivalent (real, weighted by consumption)' is the consumption-weighted average of the 'All fuel, unleaded petrol equivalent (real)' line across the full time series.

Units

Fuel prices include cost price, excise duty and VAT and are expressed in Euros per litre.


 

Policy context and targets

Context description

Fair and efficient transport pricing is a crucial precondition for sustainable transport. It implies that users pay for the full (environmental and social) costs of transport. Therefore, the price and tax levels of fuel are important for three key reasons:

  • Fuel taxation is an instrument that serves different policy objectives; one possible use could be to internalise external costs. If prices and duties of transport (including fuel taxes) covered all social costs, the demand for transport would be economically optimal for the welfare of society as a whole, since prices would reflect all health, environmental and infrastructure costs. However, fuel taxes are not the only way towards fair pricing. For example, charging per kilometre or vehicle regulations could be some effective measures;
  • Higher fuel prices act as incentives to reduce fuel consumption, e.g. through purchase and use of more fuel efficient vehicles, a shift to non-motorised or public transport modes, fewer trips and less motorised transport-orientated patterns of settlements; and
  • Differentiated fuel taxes can stimulate a shift towards alternative fuels, for example to biofuels or to electric vehicles. However, there can be unwanted side effects, e.g. the lower fuel tax on diesel, once introduced to support maritime vessels, also fostered a shift from petrol to diesel passenger cars.

The European Transport White Paper (EC, 2001) proposed to 'harmonise excise duty on diesel for commercial uses, which in practice would be higher than the current average tax on diesel'. The aim of this harmonisation is to achieve better internalisation of external costs. Harmonisation also aims to improve the internal market by establishing a level playing field for shippers from different EU Member States and creating more stable prices in road transport. However, a 2002 Commission proposal to do so was rejected by the Council. The proposal resulted in decreases in excise duty incomes for several countries, up to 50 % in the UK. Also transport organisations argued against fuel tax revision. More recently in the European transport White Paper of 2011 (EC, 2011), the Commission has proposed to 'revise motor fuel taxation with clear identification of the energy and CO2 component' by 2016.

EU minimum levels for road fuel taxes are set out in Council Directive 2003/96/EC on the taxation of energy products. As a result, the minimum excise duty for unleaded petrol increased from EUR 287 to EUR 359 per 1 000 litres. For diesel fuel, the minimum rate increased from EUR 245 to EUR 302 per 1 000 litres in 2004, and up to EUR 330 per 1 000 litres in 2010 (EC, 2007).

The EC’s 'Europe 2020' strategy (EC, 2010) includes a positive approach to energy taxes and greening transport: 'where taxes may have to rise, this should, where possible, be done in conjunction with making the tax systems more 'growth-friendly'. For example, raising taxes on labour, as has occurred in the past at great cost to jobs, should be avoided. Rather, Member States should seek to shift the tax burden from labour to energy and environmental taxes as part of 'greening' of taxation systems'.

Targets

The 2011 Transport White Paper suggests that EU motor fuel taxation should be restructured to clearly identify the energy and CO2 components. 

Related policy documents

 

Methodology

Methodology for indicator calculation

Fuel prices and taxes are presented weekly in a DG Energy Oil Bulletin (prior to 2006, data were also presented in a monthly format). Information is available for each of the EU Member States (including the EU-10 from mid-2004, and Bulgaria and Romania as of January 2008). Fuel prices are corrected for inflation using the Harmonised Indices of Consumer Prices (HICP) for each Member State. Prices are then weighted by fuel consumption to calculate an EU-28 average. 

As leaded petrol was replaced by unleaded petrol during the period studied, an equivalent price for unleaded fuel has been calculated. This is a consumption weighted average, corrected for the slightly different energy content of the two fuels.

Methodology for gap filling

No methodology for gap filling has been specified.

Methodology references

No methodology references available.

 

Uncertainties

Methodology uncertainty

There is little uncertainty in the methodology used. However, information on annual fuel consumption is not currently available. 

Prior to 2006, quarterly data were used, i.e. 15.01, 15.04, 15.07 and 15.10. After 2006, weekly data have been published. The HICP only makes monthly data available, so the same HICP index is used for every fuel price data point in each month. Consumption data are available annually, so calculations for the weighted average price by consumption use the same consumption data for every week in a given year.

Data sets uncertainty

Information on fuel prices and taxes is considered to be a reliable data set.

Rationale uncertainty

No uncertainty has been specified.

Data sources

Other info

DPSIR: Driving force
Typology: Descriptive indicator (Type A - What is happening to the environment and to humans?)
Indicator codes
  • TERM 021
Frequency of updates
Updates are scheduled once per year
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Temporal coverage

Dates

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