News Fuel Opinion

Fiji's Fuel Crisis: The New Normal for Fijians

Fiji's Fuel Crisis: The New Normal for Fijians
Ashwin Deo
SUVA, FIJI- Fiji is encountering an era of higher fuel prices, driven by volatile global markets, rising international freight costs, and the country’s heavy reliance on imported fuel. What was once considered a temporary disruption is now firmly an underlying reality.

Fuel Product
2020 (Low Point)
2026 (Current)
Unleaded Motor Spirit
FJD 1.66/L
FJD 3.93/L
Diesel
FJD 1.54/L
FJD 4.58/L
Premix
FJD 1.29/L
FJD 3.27/L
Kerosene
FJD 0.91/L
FJD 3.13/L

Higher fuel prices are the “New Normal” for Fiji and the wider Pacific region. Understanding this reality, its consequences, and our collective response are more important than ever. The relationship between fuel costs and take-home pay is one of the extreme indicators of living pressure on ordinary Fijians. While the government has taken positive steps to lift minimum wages to $5.00, the pace of fuel price increases has outstripped wage growth. For example, let’s work out with unleaded fuel to make some comparisons.

Indicator
2020
2026
National Minimum Wage
FJD 2.68/hr
FJD 5.00/hr
Unleaded Fuel Price
FJD 1.66/L
FJD 3.93/L
Litres of Fuel per Hour of Min. Wage
~1.61 L
~1.27 L
Monthly Minimum Wage (40-hr week)
~FJD 429
~FJD 800
Est. Monthly Fuel Cost (transport, cooking)
~FJD 80–120
~FJD 200–300
Fuel Cost as % of Monthly Min. Wage
~19–28%
~25–37%
Note: Estimates based on average household fuel consumption for transport and cooking. Actual costs vary.
Fuel prices in Fiji have more than doubled since the COVID-19 crisis of 2020, when unleaded fuel fell to a historic low of approximately $1.66 per litre due to collapsing global demand. In 2026, Fiji faces a very different reality, with fuel prices hiking to $3.93 per litre amid ongoing global fuel market disruptions.

Meanwhile, the situation is even more challenging for diesel users as price is sky high at $4.58, significantly increasing transportation, agricultural, and business operating costs. The burden is even greater for communities outside Vitilevu, where fuel prices are typically higher due to additional transportation and distribution costs.

A minimum wage earner today spends a larger share of their income on fuel-related expenses than they did five years ago. The core affordability challenge at $5.00/hour, a minimum wage worker earns enough to buy approximately 1.27 litres of unleaded fuel per hour of work. Given that a full day’s labour (8 hours) yields $40.00, and a single fill of a small car can cost a lot, fuel affordability is a real and daily burden.

The transition from the COVID-19 demand crisis to today's fuel supply crisis highlights a new economic normal, placing continued pressure on household budgets, business costs, and the overall cost of living.

The era of cheap fuel is unlikely to return soon. Fiji must therefore adapt to a new normal by promoting energy efficiency, expanding renewable energy, reducing fuel dependence, and encouraging smarter consumption habits. Building resilience today will be essential for protecting households, supporting businesses, and securing the nation's economic future.
Stay tuned for our next release, where we will unpack the deeper economic impact of rising fuel prices in Fiji and what it means for households, businesses, and the nation’s future direction.

For more Yellow Bucket opinion pieces click: HERE

Opinion Note

Long time fijivillage users may remember the Yellow Bucket opinion column that ran in the years leading up to the 2006 coup. Well following the repeal of the MIDA Act we are delighted to announce that YB is back!

The Yellow Bucket is something of a Communications Fiji Ltd institution…. Yes it exists…. A real Yellow Bucket that the CFL team and visitors gather around after work to drink grog and discuss the day. Legend has it that every Fiji Prime Minister has at some stage enjoyed a bilo from the bucket.

The YB column ran from 2003 to early 2007 when it was shut down under extreme pressure from the military government. Later the MIDA Act specifically forbade any use of nom de plums or pseudonyms requiring every published article to have a named author.

So why the pseudonym. The YB column was and will continue to be a product of group thinking and discussion, so it would be impossible and a little unfair to attribute it to a single author.

It will continue to provide fact-based opinion offering context to the complex and constantly unfolding story, that is our home Fiji. We stress, FACT BASED…. No rush to judgement here ….. Our aim will be to run weekly but that could change depending on the situation.

Stay tuned for the latest news on our radio stations

CFL radio frequencies
LIVE SCORES
Hurricanes vs Brumbies 7:05PM
Crusaders vs Blues 4:35PM
Chiefs vs Reds 7:05PM
Rabbitohs vs Sea Eagles 9:05PM
Knights vs Storm 8:00PM
Raiders vs Roosters 10:00PM
vs
Japan vs Fiji 10:04PM
vs
Maroons 20–22 Blues Full Time
Maroons vs Blues 10:05PM
Maroons vs Blues 10:05PM
Mexico vs South Africa 2:00pm
South Korea vs Czechia 2:00pm
Canada vs Bosnia and Herzegovina 7:00am
No recent scores