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Australia’s Prime Minister Urges Public Transport Shift
(MENAFN) Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese took the extraordinary step of addressing the nation Wednesday, warning citizens of difficult months ahead as the Middle East conflict chokes off energy supplies to much of Asia and sends fuel prices to historic highs.
In a rare national address, Albanese urged Australians to abandon their cars in favor of buses, trains, and trams — a direct appeal designed to preserve dwindling fuel stockpiles as Canberra confirmed it has already begun drawing on its strategic reserves.
“If you are hitting the road, don’t take more fuel than you need,” the Prime Minister cautioned, adding: “If you can switch to catching the train or bus or tram to work, do so. That builds our reserves and it saves fuel for people.”
The gravity of the situation was underscored by Canberra’s decision to place an emergency fuel order from the US — a move not seen in decades. Albanese also confirmed the government has slashed fuel taxes by half in an effort to ease pressure at the pump.
Though Australia sourced just 2% of its energy imports from the Middle East — valued at $37 billion in 2024 — the cascading disruption to global supply chains has proven impossible to insulate against.
“We are working to bring the price of fuel down, to make more fuel here, and to keep it onshore,” Albanese said, describing the conflict’s impact as having caused “the biggest hikes in petrol and diesel prices in history.”
Striking a tone of resolute pragmatism, the Prime Minister also outlined efforts to leverage Australia’s regional trade ties to secure greater volumes of petrol, diesel, and fertilizer. “And get more fuel here, using our strong trading relationships with our region to bring more petrol, diesel, and fertilizer to Australia,” he said, while acknowledging that “no government can promise to eliminate pressures that this war is causing.”
Despite the hardship, Albanese sought to rally public resolve. “These are uncertain times, but I am absolutely certain of this: we will deal with these challenges in the Australian way, working together and looking after each other, as we always have,” he stressed.
The Prime Minister was candid about Australia’s position in the broader conflict: while the country “is not an active participant” in the Middle East war, “all Australians are paying higher prices because of it.”
A Region on Fire
The crisis traces its origins to February 28, when Israel and the US launched a large-scale offensive against Iran, a campaign that has since claimed more than 1,340 lives — among them then-Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Tehran has responded with waves of drone and missile strikes directed at Israel, Jordan, Iraq, and Gulf nations hosting US military installations, inflicting casualties, crippling infrastructure, and sending shockwaves through global aviation and energy markets.
At least 13 US servicemen have been killed, with dozens more wounded, as the conflict shows no signs of abating.
At the epicenter of the energy crisis sits the Strait of Hormuz — the narrow but indispensable waterway that serves as the primary artery for fuel supplies across Asia — which Iran has maintained effective control over, amplifying pressure on energy-dependent nations from Canberra to Tokyo.
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