Chris Bowen says petrol reserves won’t ease shortages straight away

Adeshola Ore
The energy minister, Chris Bowen, says it will take “some time” for the petrol and disesel released from Australia’s domestic stockpile to reach areas hit by shortages.
On Friday, the Albanese government directed fuel companies to release nearly a fifth of reserve petrol and diesel supplies. Dozens of service stations across the country have run out of petrol as retailers struggle with customers panic-buying in response to skyrocketing prices from the Middle East conflict.
In an interview with ABC’s 7.30 last night, Bowen said companies had assured the government the released supply would reach regional areas:
There will be some time for it to flow through. There’s a very complicated supply chain.
But it is going to have an impact. Some companies have said it will start to have an impact in coming days, to some degree. But there will be some time before it’s all released.
Key events
Good morning, it’s Nick Visser here with you again to see what the day in breaking news holds. Let’s get to it.
Tougher penalties and new offence for hate crimes against LGBTQ+ community in NSW

Penry Buckley
The NSW government will today introduce measures it says will toughen penalties and lead to more prosecutions for hate crimes against the LGBTQ+ community.
They include a new offence which responds to a series of attacks revealed by an ABC investigation, some allegedly IS-inspired, in which teenagers lured victims on dating apps before robbing or assaulting them, in some cases filming them.
The offence for procuring a person by making false or misleading representations with the intent of committing a serious assault or robbery will not only apply to offences against the LGBTQ+ community.
Under the changes, existing “post and boast” offences for when criminals share footage of their crimes online will be expanded to cover serious assaults and robberies committed against members of the LGBTQ+ community.
The sentence for threatening or inciting violence on the grounds of a protected attribute such as sexual orientation or gender will be increased from three to five years, but the government has not moved to expand a controversial offence for inciting hatred on the grounds of race to include gender identity or sexuality. The government has been sitting on a six-month review to determine if the laws should be expanded, which was tabled in November.
The NSW premier, Chris Minns, says:
The attacks we have seen targeting members of the LGBTQIA+ community are sickening and completely unacceptable.
These laws send a clear message that if you target someone out of hatred, or try to lure someone into harm, you will face serious consequences.
Reserve Bank poised to hike rates at 2.30pm

Patrick Commins
The Reserve Bank board is widely expected to increase rates at 2.30pm today amid a global energy shock that threatens to push inflation towards 5%.
A hike would take the RBA’s cash rate target from 3.85% to 4.1%, marking the second consecutive increase after the February move.
If the economists and analysts are right, someone with a $600,000 mortgage and 25 years will see their repayments rise by another $91 a month.
Central bankers worldwide are recalibrating their plans after a broadening Middle East conflict that has sent petrol prices soaring and triggered fears of fuel shortages.
The RBA would normally look past a short-term hit to energy prices.
But inflation is already elevated at 3.8% – well above the bank’s 2-3% target – and that has left the central bank with little wriggle room and worried that rapid price increases will start to become embedded in Australia’s collective psyche.
Economists will be looking at whether the decision was unanimous, and for any indication in the board’s statement and Bullock’s press conference (at 3.30pm) that there could be a third straight hike at the May meeting.
Chris Bowen says petrol reserves won’t ease shortages straight away

Adeshola Ore
The energy minister, Chris Bowen, says it will take “some time” for the petrol and disesel released from Australia’s domestic stockpile to reach areas hit by shortages.
On Friday, the Albanese government directed fuel companies to release nearly a fifth of reserve petrol and diesel supplies. Dozens of service stations across the country have run out of petrol as retailers struggle with customers panic-buying in response to skyrocketing prices from the Middle East conflict.
In an interview with ABC’s 7.30 last night, Bowen said companies had assured the government the released supply would reach regional areas:
There will be some time for it to flow through. There’s a very complicated supply chain.
But it is going to have an impact. Some companies have said it will start to have an impact in coming days, to some degree. But there will be some time before it’s all released.
Welcome
Good morning and welcome to our live news blog. I’m Martin Farrer with the best of the overnight stories and then it will be Nick Visser to guide you through the news day.
The economy and cost of living will be one of the big stories today with the Reserve Bank expected to raise interest rates when it announces the outcome of its monetary policy meeting at 2.30pm. The main reason is persistent inflation, further fuelled by war-boosted petrol prices.
Speaking of which, we have Chris Bowen’s comments on fuel shortages coming up – he says the nation’s fuel reserves are being poured into the market but may not have an immediate obvious effect.