Omv Denies Breaking Austria's Rules on Lowering Petrol Prices
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on April 14, 2026
2 min readLast updated: April 14, 2026
Add as preferred source on GooglePublished by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on April 14, 2026
2 min readLast updated: April 14, 2026
Add as preferred source on GoogleAustria is ordering a review into whether OMV correctly applied the newly introduced “petrol price brake” for fuel, amid OMV’s assertion it complied by differentiating between domestic refinery output and imports.
VIENNA, April 14 (Reuters) - Austria said it was ordering an official review of whether partially state-owned oil and gas company OMV is complying with newly introduced rules on lowering petrol prices, as the company denied on Tuesday it was breaking them.
The U.S.-Israeli war against Iran has led to the largest oil supply disruption in history and sent oil prices surging, with European governments scrambling to protect consumers.
Austria's government has introduced a so-called "petrol price brake" under which the increased value-added tax take from higher petrol prices is passed on to consumers in the form of a reduction in tax on petrol and diesel, initially set at 5 euro cents (6 U.S. cents) per litre.
National broadcaster ORF reported on Tuesday OMV that had informed wholesale customers that it would only be reducing the price of diesel by 2.8 cents a litre.
"We and E-Control were informed at short notice of OMV's planned price adjustment," Austria's economy ministry said when asked about the report, referring to the national energy regulator tasked with enforcing the rules.
"The burden of proof now lies with OMV. We will in any case task E-Control with carrying out a special verification," it added. E-Control said in response to a question from Reuters that it would soon request the relevant information from OMV.
Asked for comment, OMV did not deny the reported price change but said it was obeying the rules, arguing that the calculation was different when taking into account fuel that was imported rather than refined in Austria.
OMV was fully passing on the 5 cent reduction on products from Schwechat, its main refinery in Austria, it said.
"This results in a combined calculation based on OMV's production in Schwechat and import volumes, which determines the OMV selling price for wholesale customers," the company added.
($1 = 0.8473 euros)
(Reporting by Alexandra Schwarz-Goerlich,Writing by Francois Murphy, Editing by Alex Richardson)
Austria's new 'petrol price brake' passes increased tax revenue from higher petrol prices back to consumers as a reduction in tax, set at 5 euro cents per litre.
Austria ordered a review to verify if OMV is fully complying with the new petrol price regulations after reports suggested only partial price reductions.
OMV claims it calculates reductions based on both imported fuel and products refined in Austria, resulting in a combined price adjustment.
The U.S.-Israeli war against Iran has caused the largest oil supply disruption in history, leading to surging oil prices.
The national energy regulator E-Control is tasked with enforcing the rules and is carrying out the current review of OMV.
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