Ransonering av diesel och bensin på Thailands bensinstationer

 
Hej

En begravningsentreprenör nekades fylla tre dunkar med diesel eftersom försäljaren trodde att det handlade om hamstring, då hämtade begravningsentreprenören kistan och tog med den till bensinstationen.


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Mvh isan lover
Det var ju ett jävla slöseri med diesel :mad:
 
Ja ja det är bara att betala vad det kostar inga större problem för mig men tänker på många som lever på marginalerna här i Thailand.
 
Idag gick priset upp för vattendunkarna från 12 till 15 Bath. Det är dom värda jag brukar nästan alltid ge dom en extra slant när jag betalar.
 
Diesel prices in Thailand will rise again on April 3 after the Oil Fuel Fund committee reduced subsidies for a second consecutive day, pushing retail costs higher and triggering increases in public transport fares. The subsidy for diesel has been cut by 3.51 baht per litre to 14.27 baht per litre, resulting in pump prices rising by 3.50 baht per litre to 47.74 baht per litre. Biodiesel B20 will also see a similar increase, with prices climbing by 3.50 baht per litre to 42.74 baht per litre following a subsidy reduction of 3.48 baht per litre.
 
Man sitter inte och väntar på möjligheter minsann. Jordbrukare med extra pengar på kontot, företagare och bensinstationspersonal – inte undra på att det tar slut. Lägger på 10 baht och säljer vid sidan av, framför allt allt över gränsen.

Man skriker och hatar Kambodja där uppe vid gränsen, men kan man tjäna en baht så kvittar både krig, pest och ALLT annat.
Lojaliteten för Thailand och medmänniskor sträcker sig inte längre än till 10 baht...............Men kan man skicka en dotter till pattis, så vad är lite bensinexport till dem som försökte döda dig, ja, fast det var ju igår.......

Ibland är Thailand mer än ................

"
57 Million Litres Missing: Cambodia Smuggling Link Emerges in Massive Thai Fuel Scandal
The investigation into missing fuel in Surat Thani has taken a serious turn, with authorities now probing possible oil smuggling routes to Cambodia alongside widespread hoarding and black market sales inside Thailand.
Officials revealed that 57 million litres of fuel vanished during transport, with only 160 million litres delivered out of 217 million litres shipped from six depots. The scale of the discrepancy has triggered a full-scale investigation into what is now believed to be a coordinated network.
Rutthaphol Naowarat confirmed the case has been escalated to a special investigation by the Department of Special Investigation.
At the same time, Thatchai Pitapilabutr revealed that some of the missing fuel may have been diverted offshore. Authorities are now investigating maritime transfers, including a vessel linked to fuel movement toward Cambodia. The boat, which surfaced in social media clips, is registered under the name “Chokchonlakorn,” with all six crew members believed to be Thai nationals. The owner is being summoned for questioning.
On land, the situation is just as serious. Police uncovered at least six petrol stations hoarding fuel and secretly selling it for profit—around 10 baht per litre above pump prices. Instead of supplying motorists, fuel was diverted directly to industrial and agricultural buyers.
Investigators found:

• 27 petrol stations and 12 fuel traders supplying fuel to stations that were officially closed
• Around 6 stations under suspicion for hoarding and illegal distribution
• Fuel ordered in Lat Krabang but quietly redirected to provinces like Nakhon Sawan
• Hidden stockpiles discovered behind petrol stations
Supply data points to deliberate restriction:

• Some depots cut distribution from 18 million litres in February to 11 million litres in March
• Northern depots reduced daily output from 2 million litres to about 1.2 million litres
• Four depots were found completely empty despite refineries running at full capacity
This gap between refinery output and depot shortages has raised strong suspicion of speculative trading and organised manipulation of supply.
In a separate case, authorities seized 40,000 litres of fuel being smuggled by truck in Mae Sot District, Tak, reinforcing concerns that illegal fuel diversion is happening across multiple channels—both on land and at sea.
Yutthana Praekham said the investigation now covers hoarding, transport delays, and cross-border smuggling. A central monitoring unit is being set up to track fuel movement from import through to final delivery.
Authorities are now moving to question all those involved as they work to expose the full network behind the missing fuel and ongoing supply manipulation."
 
 
 
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