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Firms being driven round the bend by soaring fuel prices

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Published Date: 03 June 2008
With oil prices at record levels, it's not only motorists who are suffering. Mark McLaughlin examines the effect rapidly-rising pump prices are having on local businesses.
WHILE many drivers can either absorb the cost or leave their cars at home, many fuel-dependent businesses are fighting for survival. Last week, a convoy of hauliers took to the streets of London to protest at a further proposed 2p hike in fuel duty.

The protests might not yet be on the scale of those witnessed at Grangemouth and elsewhere at the turn of the century, but the mood is getting uglier as businesses find themselves being squeezed ever tighter.

Road hauliers and other fuel-dependent businesses, such as bus companies, taxis and driving schools, are feeling the pinch more than most.

The Road Hauliers Association (RHA) say local hauliers have seen their overheads increase substantially with the fuel bills now making up over 40 per cent of their total outlay – up from around 30 per cent just six months ago.

With details of company turnovers commercially sensitive, most local hauliers have been reluctant to talk about their bills. But one Restalrig-based company says its May fuel bill was £18,000 more expensive than in May 2007.

A second haulier, Neil Williams Haulage in Dalkeith, is facing similar bills and is struggling to make ends meet. Partner Craig Williams said: "We have to try to pass that cost on to the customer while still staying competitive, but the top line is fast approaching the bottom line.

"In truth, I think the Government could afford to let the tax go a bit. They're as much to blame as the oil companies for the high prices. It's the variation in prices that's hit us most. When we take on a contract, the cost is agreed, but some contracts were agreed on last year's fuel prices and we can't pass that on." RHA Scottish director Phil Flanders, based in Midlothian, said: "Some hauliers can clock up two round trips to London a week. As of this month, the cost of filling a 44-tonne diesel truck was sitting at around £600 a tank – up from £400 in January 2007.

"Ninety-two per cent of haulage companies operate with less than ten vehicles, but some of the larger companies could be facing massive fuel bill rises."

At current prices, the annual fuel bill for two round trips to London a week would be around £100,000 per vehicle a year.

Bus companies are also being badly hit. Edinburgh Coach Lines Ltd, which operates throughout Europe from its base on Salamander Street, faced a fuel bill of £37,500 last month. The bill was over £7000 higher than May 2007 and prices are continuing to rise.

Managing director Peter Fyvie said: "We're having to absorb most of this cost ourselves. We used to offer discounts and special offers but we just can't afford it now. Our 49-seaters are only getting about ten miles to the gallon, sometimes even less through cities. Edinburgh's roadworks are costing us dearly."

One company which is on the road round the clock is Lothian Buses. Chief executive Neil Renilson said fuel now accounted for 26 per cent of the firm's turnover – up from 15 per cent last year.

He said: "We recently increased the adult ticket price by 10p, which will generate a further £2.9 million this year. About £1.8 million of this will go towards covering the cost of the Government's cuts in concessionary travel, leaving £1.1m for 'general inflationary costs'."

Ron Hewitt, chief executive of the Edinburgh Chamber of Commerce, said Scottish bus companies faced a singular challenge because of the Scottish Government's decision not to pass on a £7.5m fuel rebate awarded by the treasury. The Government has countered that it spends a "considerable" £260m on buses already, but the chamber has also accused the SNP in the council of short-changing cabbies.

Mr Hewitt said: "We would like to see an emergency meeting of the transport committee to review taxi fares immediately because these guys are in dire straits." But councillor Colin Keir, convener of the regulatory committee, said while he was "sympathetic" to drivers' needs, a fare review was not due to take place until mid-2009.

Edinburgh taxi driver Stephen Hay, 40, from East Calder, is paying between £250 and £300 more a month for his fuel than this time last year, which amounts to around £3000 of his annual wage.

He said: "I'm having to work an extra hour and half a night to equal what I was taking last year.

On a Friday night, I usually do a 12-hour shift. In May 2007 my fuel bill was about £22 but last Friday I spent £40."

Driving instructor Billy Budgen, managing director of Driving Training Centre on Great Junction Street, is currently around £1200 a year worse off as a result of the price rises.

He said: "Most of our cars are diesel and last year we were able to fill a tank for £40, but now that will barely get us 40 litres.

"It now costs instructors around £50 to fill a tank, and during an average 40-hour week that instructor will have to put two-and-a-half tanks of petrol in his car.

"At £20 a lesson, an instructor earns just under £20,000 a year before tax, but if the fuel bills continue to rise we could face a shortage of instructors, as many decide it's not worth it."


Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 03 June 2008 9:33 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Mike555,

03/06/2008 11:44:58
Problem is that this Liebor government can't afford to drop the tax take on fuel since Brown has made such a hash of other issues like Northern Rock that has cost us Billions.
2

Alternative (High Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 03/06/2008 12:12:56
You may have something there Mike.

They should scrap fuel duty completely. This would bring the price back down to between 50-65 per litre, which is what it should be.
3

Gastric Antral Vascular Ectasia,

03/06/2008 12:23:08
Liebor government! Oh, the wit!
4

Edward,

03/06/2008 12:43:04
Apart from the Fuel duty, Petrol and Deisel is also subject to VAT, something the UK government seem shy about mentioning. So regardless of the Fuel Duty, if cost increases so does the VAT
5

tumshie heid,

03/06/2008 12:43:14
#3
If you don't like Mike's subtle take on Labour then how about;
Thieving,deceitful,untrustworthy,murderous war criminals. The list of adjectives could of course go on and on but would be a little tiresome to type every time Labour are discussed.
6

Bertie The Bat,

03/06/2008 12:46:07
Let the train take the strain.
7

tumshie heid,

03/06/2008 12:48:06
#The fuel costs for trains will be increasing massively as well,whether it is diesel or electricity.
8

Brian Hill,

Edinburgh 03/06/2008 13:32:07
Is this point where motorists and business in Scotland thinks:

Mmmm, would it be different if we had control of our own Oil?

Answers on a ballot paper please to......
9

gorgeousgorgieboy,

Edinburgh 03/06/2008 13:43:38
...... the Jowly Jambo, Holyrood.
10

Unimpressed one,

03/06/2008 13:45:30
So we've had an experiment by proxy as it were, similar to that which a Scottish Climate Change bill would deliver if we reduced our 'carbon footprints' by 80%. Notice how this fuel price increase effects virtually every aspect of a modern industrial economy. Hands up those now who would vote for the greens with their imposition of a similar scheme but call it a 'carbon tax'.
11

celtic4,

USA 03/06/2008 14:16:22
The Oil slam is hurting the US also. Gm to close 4 auto factories in US, Canada, and Mexico, and there is talk of discontinuing the Hummer.
Ford also has sold the Jaquar and Land Rover to Tata Motors in India.
Not many people are buy cars it seems.
12

Angus R,

03/06/2008 14:33:57
'Partner Craig Williams said: "We have to try to pass that cost on to the customer while still staying competitive, but the top line is fast approaching the bottom line.

Is this not the case for ALL haulage firms though so they are all passing the costs on and their margins will stay the same?

As for his comment 'struggling to make ends meet' oh yeh right - best no drive yer porsche too often then!!
13

gotalottosay,

03/06/2008 14:55:26
oh and the rest of us are not being driven round the bend. the only garage in haddington hikes the prices up on a three day cycle. today the cost is £1.18. in musselburgh tesco are at it too. last week it was £1.15, this week £1.17. and by the way the only garage owner in haddington who hikes the prices up declares he is not making any money out of and that ofcourse is why he drives a bentley!!!!!!!!
14

PeterPete,

03/06/2008 15:23:53
and yet 58% of car journeys are under 6 km, with most journeys having just one person in the car. And still lorry and bus drivers sit idling with their engines on whilst eating their sandwiches, so fuel cant be all that expensive.

I heard on the TV the other day that many lorries only do 4 miles to the gallon! Maybe they should have bought more efficient lorries, but then the motoring lobby have campaigned against higher standards for years, and as for all those who bought gas-guzzling 4x4s to drive round Morningside....... my heart bleeds.
15

True Scot,

Over Here 03/06/2008 15:25:29
The simple fact is Scotland produces more Oil than Kuwait
I will say that again we produce more oil than Kuwait, let that sink in.
I don't see any Kuwait business hurting through the fuel price, then why should our Scots business people hurt through the fuel price??
Give us independence now
IT'S TIME
16

AndyPandy,

03/06/2008 15:28:27
Not that long ago, the govt suggested replacing fuel duty with a pay as you drive tax. People went ballistic. The plan was withdrawn.

And now they moan that fuel is too expensive. They had their chance. If that lorry going to London every week was paying per mile instead of fuel duty, it would be a lot cheaper. I wonder if he was one of the ones who signed the online petition against pay-per-mile?
17

AndyPandy,

03/06/2008 15:30:31
#15
In Kuwait, petrol at the pump is subsidised by the govt.

The price of a barrel of oil is the same all over the world, so how would indpendence help?

The amount of oil coming out of the North Sea is declining by about 7% a year.

THE TIME HAS PASSED.
18

Merouane,

Edinburgh 03/06/2008 15:50:41
#17. The amount is going down each year... and the value is going up. Over all, the oil that is left there is of greater value than the oil we've extracted already.
19

AndyPandy,

03/06/2008 17:20:51
#18

but either way, the price goes up and independence would not stop that!

When a resource becomes scarce, its value increases, with or without Scottish independence. Shame that we use the precious resource to make crisp packets and to drive to the corner shop to buy said crisp packet.

I read elsewhere that it can cost as much to drive in the US as it does here. Although their petrol is cheaper, their cars are so inefficient that it cancels out the cheap fuel.
20

Il Penseroso,

Inverurie 03/06/2008 17:27:34
Is it too soon to mention to Andy Pandy that his comment "The Time Has Passd" isn't quite true. We have been robbed of a fiscal inheritance, lied to by Scottish Labour MPs about the true value of a Scottish resource, denied the means to benefit every man woman and child in Scotland and lost a chance to be Independent from a corrupt political system. The resource is still there and coupled to a new political system that puts Scotland first the Time Is Now. Gordon Brown's fiscal prudence has now been rumbled for what it was; an economy based on ten years of credit with little or no money left in the kitty now!
21

Merouane,

Edinburgh 03/06/2008 18:23:00
#19. Aye of course. The cost of a barrel of oil is going to go up. What independence would do, however, is allow those increasing tax revenues to be spent in offsetting the cost to the individual (in the short term), in repositioning our economy and infrastructure (in the long term) plus invest in an oil fund to generate benefits long after the oil has run out.

The UK government is squandering that money and will leave us with little long term legacy. We need to change that.
22

Upandunder,

03/06/2008 18:58:21
Petrol is in fact cheap in Britain, thanks a combination of North Sea oil, our long coastline's excellent port and refinery facilities and low road and rail transportation distances from port to pump.

Petrol or diesel costs 30 to 40p in every pound spent at the forecourt.

The other 60/70p goes straight to Gordon Clown's tax-and-waste government.

HE'S the one who should make the price cut - much more so than the oil companies. How about pulling out of Iraq, for starters? That'd save a few bucks.
23

help my bob,

Scotland 03/06/2008 19:17:23
If Edinburgh cabby's are feeling the pinch, why are they driving any of the LTI cab range, They only do 23 to the gallon, If they where to change to any of the other manufacturers cabs like the E7 and its lookalikes they would get nearer 40 miles per gallon.
A recent disability forum stated that they can even drive saloons as taxis, some of them can do over 50 mpg, but as usual ECC have there heads stuck where the sun dont shine and refuse to let them, All ECC is interested in is the licence fee's and at £1250 is the highest fee in the whole of the UK the next nearest being £300, so perhaps ECC would like to explain to the drivers why they must pay £950 more than anyone else
24

help my bob,

Scotland 03/06/2008 19:37:47
Hopefully at the next election there will be no labour or Tory idiots voted for.
The quicker we get our independence the quicker we get control of our fuel prices and our oil before there none left, if this happened the price of all fuel at the pumps would be no more than £0.50 and that would include a small amount of duty to cover the running costs of the country like hostpitals schools and emergancy services, VAT could be reduced to 5% or scraped as thats just another expence the public dont need
25

truthsleuth,

03/06/2008 20:19:37
The next time some of you petrolheads are in hospital having had a crash with one of your fellow petrolheads just cosider how you managed to get that brain surgery on the NHS.
It was paid for by taxation ie some came from income tax some from petrol tax and some actually came from you.

If you reduce fuel tax which tax would you like to increase to pay for all the NHS care you would get.

Get your your head out of the exhaust pipe and breathe (fresh air) you know you deserve it.
26

truthsleuth,

03/06/2008 20:24:09
What is the difference between secondary picketing and the protests of the road haulage mob.
What is the difference between miners striking for their jobs and blocking the highway and the road haulage mob blocking the highway.

In the one case you get a police escort along the roadand in the other you get escorted by the police to the police station.
27

piper,

03/06/2008 20:38:40
we should be like the french and put the country to a standstill its always the motorist and the smokers +the drinkers who pay through the nose the whisky industry makes 12p a bottle the rest is on tax we pay over the odds on everything and our country makes it you go abroad and you pay half the price for a bottle of whiskey we produce oil and we have to pay over the odds for that as well aye we should bring the country to as standstill we may suffer on the short term but win in the long term
28

Bravetart,

03/06/2008 22:48:47
"WHILE many drivers can either absorb the cost or leave their cars at home"

Oh really, absorb the cost, no - do without the things that make life worth living, yes. Is this the Labour line? The average car user (forgetting about those who have alternates such as reliable public transport etc.) is managing? How divorced from reality they are.

What is the point anymore. These leeches suck us dry and then come back to see if they missed a drop.
29

geekpie,

forfar 04/06/2008 10:28:04
It's good news that the price of oil and petrol is going up. There are far too many cars in Britain now: congestion has turned people against each other. By all means compensate hauliers so they can compete with foreign firms.
30

Green booger,

04/06/2008 14:09:42
Told you to vote UKIP.

Now you must bookmark www.infowars.com

 

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