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Cyprus extends fuel tax cut to August as Iran war keeps energy prices elevated

In-Cyprus · 2026-06-24

AI SUMMARY

• What happened: Cyprus has extended its reduced excise duty on motor fuels until August 31, 2026, to mitigate the impact of elevated energy prices due to the ongoing Iran war. • Why it matters: The extension, costing approximately €12 million, aims to protect consumers and businesses from high fuel prices, which have surged significantly amid geopolitical tensions affecting global oil supply. • What to watch next: Monitor the effectiveness of this measure and any further government actions in response to energy price fluctuations and the broader economic impact of the Iran war.

Economy cost-of-living crisisenergysocial welfareTop News Cyprus extends fuel tax cut to August as Iran war keeps energy prices elevated Eu Countries Cap Fuel Prices As Cyprus Watches And Waits Relevant News Cyprus extends fuel tax cut to August as Iran war keeps energy prices elevated 24 June 2026 EY launches enterprise-scale agentic AI to redefine the audit experience for the AI era 24 June 2026 Nicosia confirms Board of Peace will meet in Cyprus, but island played no organising role 24 June 2026 newsroom 24 June 2026 FacebookXWhatsAppEmailPrintViber Cyprus has extended its reduced excise duty on motor fuels by two months to 31 August 2026, as the government moves to shield consumers and businesses from energy prices still running above normal levels in the wake of the Iran war, Government Spokesperson Konstantinos Letymbiotis announced on Wednesday. The Council of Ministers approved the extension at a fiscal cost of approximately €12 million. The decision was taken in light of a declining trend in energy prices which nonetheless remain above normal levels due to geopolitical developments, Letymbiotis said. What the cut means at the pump The measure, first approved on 26 March, reduces the excise duty on motor fuels by 8.33 euro cents per litre — bringing rates to the minimum levels permitted under EU legislation. For petrol, the rate dropped from €0.429 to €0.359 per litre; for diesel, from €0.40 to €0.33 per litre, according to figures published at the time of the original announcement. The cut was introduced after a sharp price spike recorded by the Retail Price Observatory in the period from 27 February to 26 March: the price of unleaded 95 rose by 20.2 euro cents per litre, from €1.314 to €1.516, while diesel surged by a record 34.8 euro cents per litre, from €1.410 to €1.758. The Iran war backdrop The price spike coincided with the global energy disruption triggered by the 2026 Iran war. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz — through which around 20% of the world’s oil trade passes — led the International Energy Agency to characterise the conflict’s impact as the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market, according to reporting on the crisis. Global gas prices surged by 30% as a result. The Cyprus government referred to “geopolitical developments” as the driver of persistently elevated energy prices, without specifically naming the Iran war in its announcement. The broader package The fuel excise cut forms part of a wider government support package of 17 measures totalling €196 million, approved by the Council of Ministers to address the impact of elevated energy prices. The package includes 11 measures with direct fiscal impact totalling €141 million, and six housing policy measures worth a further €55 million, according to the gov.cy announcement. Read more: Thinking of buying an electric car in Cyprus? Here’s what’s holding the market back Subscribe to our Newsletter Latest News EY launches enterprise-scale agentic AI to redefine the audit experience for the AI era Nicosia confirms Board of Peace will meet in Cyprus, but island played no organising role Cyprus to dodge Europe’s killer heatwave, meteorologist says Hourly-paid government workers strike for first time in Republic’s history Things to do on Wednesday, June 24 UK Met Office issues red extreme heat warning for southern England On this day: John Isner, Nicolas Mahut play longest match in tennis history in 2010 Follow en.philenews on Google News and be the first to know all the news about Cyprus and the world.

Source: In-Cyprus
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