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ONTARIO: Lower gas prices not the work of Ontario government, experts say

Gas prices across the province have dropped significantly over the last few months, but petroleum experts say the Ford government is only responsible for about five cents of that
pumping gas
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Ontario's premier and his MPPs are taking credit for the declining price of gas, but petroleum analysts say the government has very little to do with the current price at the pumps.

Gas prices for regular self-serve started 2019 below a dollar a litre in Ottawa, at an average of 95 cents on Wednesday morning. The capital's average gas price has declined by about 30 cents a litre over the past six months.

Premier Doug Ford and his caucus took to social media over the holidays to claim responsibility for the pump price decrease.

 

 

 

 

But petroleum analysts say the Ford government's claims aren't completely truthful, and that global oil prices are much more responsible for recent decreases in the price at the pump.

"Eighty per cent of the drop (in gas prices) is the result of the drop in oil -- that's dropped about $33 a barrel," said Dan McTeague, a gas price analyst with GasBuddy.com. "The other 20 per cent is the result of the provincial government scrapping the cap-and-trade carbon tax."

Gas price experts say the Ford government's move to scrap the province's cap-and-trade system has only shaved about five cents a litre off the price of gasoline, and that the premier's claims are running on fumes.

"I think they're huffing and puffing; they don't really understand how gasoline is actually priced," said Roger McKnight, a petroleum analyst at En-Pro. "They're not in the oil business; they're in the political business."

McKnight says crude oil prices account for about 60 per cent of the price of gasoline, and that oil prices have nothing to do with governments -- be they Progressive Conservative, Liberal or NDP.

-- with files from CityNews