Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Most Fuel Suppliers Won't Release Profit Margin Details To B.C. Gas Price Probe

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jul, 2019 08:02 PM

    VANCOUVER — An impasse may be developing just days before hearings are set to begin at the British Columbia inquiry examining possible reasons for soaring gas prices in the province.


    The B.C. Utilities Commission has been ordered to review the last four years of gas and diesel pricing in the province and wants suppliers to complete a questionnaire about various business aspects including profit margins.


    Those suppliers range from Shell and Imperial to Suncor, Husky, Super Save and 7-11, but documents submitted to the commission show that only 7-11 has responded with details about how it sets the price per litre at the pumps.


    It has requested the information not be released publicly and the utilities commission has complied, posting a redacted version of 7-11's questionnaire response to its website.


    The other suppliers offered almost identical reasons for withholding profit margin data, with Husky's submission citing "commercially sensitive information" that is "not shared publicly or between refiners."


    The inquiry timetable calls for the release of the second phase of the utilities commission consultant report by next Wednesday, followed by up to four days of what is termed an "oral workshop," where panel members can question industry representatives, including gas and diesel suppliers.


    When it unveiled the process for the inquiry in May, the utilities commission said it would explore factors potentially affecting prices in B.C. since 2015, including competition and the amount of fuel in storage.


    The inquiry is also expected to examine mechanisms that could be used to moderate price fluctuations and increases.

    As the price of a litre of regular gasoline climbed above $1.70 in mid-May, Premier John Horgan ordered the probe, saying in a news release that gas and diesel price increases were "alarming, increasingly out of line with the rest of Canada, and people in B.C. deserve answers."


    The three-person inquiry panel must submit its final report by Aug. 30.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Randy Rays: Aggressive Mating Behaviour Closes Stingray Exhibit At Winnipeg Zoo

    WINNIPEG — Three stingrays have died and 24 others are getting what amounts to a cold shower after aggressive mating behaviour at a Winnipeg zoo.    

    Randy Rays: Aggressive Mating Behaviour Closes Stingray Exhibit At Winnipeg Zoo

    Sunny Future: Alberta Town Becomes Solar-powered 'Net Zero' Community

    RAYMOND, Alta. — What began as a friendly rivalry between two southern Alberta towns has ended with what may be one of the most extensive programs of solar power anywhere in the country.

    Sunny Future: Alberta Town Becomes Solar-powered 'Net Zero' Community

    Winnipeg Police Cruiser Stolen As Officers Track Down Suspected Car Thieves

    Winnipeg Police Cruiser Stolen As Officers Track Down Suspected Car Thieves
    Winnipeg police who were chasing a stolen vehicle ended up having one of their own cars stolen by a suspected thief.    

    Winnipeg Police Cruiser Stolen As Officers Track Down Suspected Car Thieves

    Police Seek Tips To Catch Graffiti Vandal

    Since June 7 there have been a number of instances of spray-painted graffiti, targeting buildings, vehicles, parks and public washrooms in Ladner.

    Police Seek Tips To Catch Graffiti Vandal

    Delta Police Looking For Witnesses, Dashcam Video In Deltaport Way Crash That Killed Surrey Truck Driver Rajvinder Singh Sidhu

    Were you travelling southbound in Delta on Hwy 17 or Deltaport Way on the morning of June 13, between 9-9:30 am?

    Delta Police Looking For Witnesses, Dashcam Video In Deltaport Way Crash That Killed Surrey Truck Driver Rajvinder Singh Sidhu

    Suspicious Death At South Vancouver Store Now Considered as City’s Sixth Homicide Of 2019: Police

    Suspicious Death At South Vancouver Store Now Considered as City’s Sixth Homicide Of 2019: Police
    The Suspicious Death Of A Man At A South Vancouver Appliance Store Is Now Being Treated As A Homicide By Police.

    Suspicious Death At South Vancouver Store Now Considered as City’s Sixth Homicide Of 2019: Police