Here’s a concise update on Australia’s fuel supply status over the last 30 days.
- Australia has been managing through elevated global supply tensions with fuel stockpiles reported around the mid-40s days for petrol and diesel in early to mid-April 2026, but regional supply pressures persisted in several states. This aligns with government statements that normal shipments were continuing while stock levels remained a concern if disruptions persist.[3][6]
- Government and industry sources described ongoing efforts to shore up supplies, including accelerated shipments from Asia-Pacific suppliers and rostering of domestic releases to prioritize regional areas, as well as assurances that fuel would flow to the domestic market rather than export in certain periods.[4][3]
- Public commentary through March–April 2026 highlighted continued vigilance around the 30-day buffer, with discussions about potential moves toward a 90-day stock target and longer-term energy sovereignty measures, including refinery investment and diversification of supply routes.[5][3]
- Independent industry reporting noted that the short-term risk remained tied to Middle East disruptions (notably Hormuz/Iran-related tensions) and how long those conditions could persist, influencing prices and fuel availability at the pump.[2][7]
Illustration: a simple timeline of the key developments (mid-March to mid-April 2026) would show:
- mid-March: government notes sufficient supply into April, some uncertainty into late April.[2]
- early April: shipments and reserves discussed as secure, with government reinforcing stock levels.[4]
- mid-April: reports of ongoing shipments and stock resilience, but continued focus on regional supply priorities and potential longer-term reserve targets.[6][3]
Note on sources: the coverage below provides snapshots from multiple outlets and official statements:
- Australian fuel stock levels and near-term supply assurances.[3]
- Market and ministerial commentary on stock levels and supply arrangements through March–April 2026.[2][4]
- Industry and media analysis of the 30-day reserve status and longer-term policy considerations.[1][5]
If you’d like, I can assemble a short, cited briefing with direct quotes and a simple chart showing the reported reserve ranges (days of fuel) over the 30-day window, or pull the latest official statements from the Australian government for precise figures.