5 Reasons Why Petrol Prices Should Be Higher

Every petrolhead loves cheap gas. But what if I told you we’d be better off with expensive fuel?
5 Reasons Why Petrol Prices Should Be Higher

I take full responsibility for the bucketloads of hate I’m going to get over this article, especially since I’m writing this from the United States where petrol prices are currently averaging about $1.60 per gallon. If that’s not enough to hate me, know that I just did a 3000-mile road trip in a 255bhp Infiniti I35 and spent only about $170 in gas. For the record, yes that made me very happy.

That said, I had lots of time to think on that trip, and it brought me to a surprising conclusion. Lower petrol prices certainly help people in the short-term, but what about long-term? Obviously there’s the immediate benefit of having more cash in our pockets to spend, and lower transportation costs should mean lower prices for the goods we buy.

But I’ve yet to see those lower prices in stores, nor have I seen much of a change in airline fares. And as for that extra cash we save directly from lower pump prices, it somehow seems to get spent on trivial things anyway. So that begs the question - are we really better off with lower petrol prices? Short-term can be better if we’re smart with how we use the extra cash, but long-term we’re going to be worse off in many ways.

1. Oil is a finite resource

Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Like it or not, some day there isn’t going to be any more oil. Whether that’s in 20 years or 200 years, the fact remains that oil will eventually be used up, and without oil there’s no petrol. Higher prices now will at least encourage more frugality, extending the supply while science figures out a way to ween us off this stuff.

2. Fewer cars on the road

5 Reasons Why Petrol Prices Should Be Higher

Higher petrol prices mean people drive less, carpool more, and that leads to fewer cars on the road. Now you can take this a couple different ways, the obvious being that fewer cars on the road creates less greenhouse gas emissions, letting us all breathe better while also saving the planet.

Given that this is a car site filled with people who love to spew emissions (myself included) let me paint this another way. Fewer cars on the road means less traffic, less traffic means fewer traffic jams and reduced congestion, and all of that means you can go faster and farther without all the road rage.

3. Leads to better engines

Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Photo: Wikimedia Commons

You know the awesome high-revving, small-displacement engines everyone loves? The first oil crisis back in the 1970s was a major catalyst in moving them forward. That’s not to say they didn’t exist prior, but the threat of limited oil supplies served to seriously kick start manufacturers into finding more efficient ways to make power. And yes, that also means you can thank high petrol prices for the widespread use of turbochargers we enjoy today.

4. Drives the demand for alternative / better fuel sources

Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Photo: Wikimedia Commons

As a fuel source for engines, petrol is terrible. The best gasoline engines generally have an efficiency rating of around 30 per cent. That means only 30 per cent of the total energy contained in the fuel is actually being used to generate useful power; the remaining 70 per cent is going to waste. As long as petrol is convenient and cheap, there won’t be much motivation to develop alternative fuel sources.

Meanwhile, electric motors operate at 90 per cent efficiency while producing more usable power in a much simpler design. If petrol prices get terrifically expensive, you can bet we’ll start seeing some rapid developments in electric power. That’s definitely not a bad thing for those of us who like to go fast.

5. Forces people to live smarter and leaner

5 Reasons Why Petrol Prices Should Be Higher

When petrol prices are high, people must adjust their entire lifestyle to compensate. I know it’s blasphemy to make such claims on a site devouted to the art of driving, but living a leaner lifestyle with constraints and budgets is a good thing - especially in the automotive world. In fact, such measures often lead to a better quality of life because the excess is stripped away, leaving people to focus on the things that really matter.

I’m getting way too philosophical here, so let me just try to sum it up like this: The original Star Wars movie was awesome because George Lucas had limited budgets and resources to work with. When those constraints disappeared with The Phantom Menace, the film was crap because Lucas lost sight of what mattered. Translated to cars, that means we drive a little less but enjoy our time behind the wheel even more. It means we don’t chuck our limited funds at massive stereo systems, but invest in upgraded suspension components or engine tweaks. This leaner-is-better concept is something I believe most people understand, but don’t necessarily want to accept as something that can make life - even car life - better.

That’s why I’m just fine with petrol prices going bonkers. It hurts in the short-term, but we’ll all be better off in the long run.

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Comments

Anonymous

Roads will NOT be more empty, that was proven here in the Netherlands….. couple years back they added 25 cents and it was less busy for 3 days and then all was back to normal

02/06/2016 - 09:49 |
0 | 0
Rogue86 Photography

So the crux of this article is that it’s better if only the wealthiest people can drive, given that these will be the only ones who can afford the fuel? In the UK, our government is trying fairly hard at supporting your theory so it adds a 61% duty on fuel. The intent of this is to force more people to take public transport, which is privatised and as a result their fares have increased due to demand. With many employers sticking to the pay-freezes caused by the recession, its the common person who is being hit the hardest. That’s while we ignore the knock-on effect that oil prices have on global markets and the effective sanction-wars that countries (notably the US) are waging.

Paying more for fuel is a nice idea in theory, but in reality it makes the poor people poorer and the people who sell it much, much richer. I’m not exaggerating when I say that the current -20p/litre drop in fuel prices in the UK is keeping food in peoples mouths.

02/06/2016 - 09:53 |
22 | 0
SpotterJacob

Move over here, to Europe, for a year and drive a fun car with big, fun engine. You will be back in the USA in no time

02/06/2016 - 10:08 |
92 | 0

Did that for years in the UK.

Now live in the U.S and… I ain’t coming back.

02/06/2016 - 11:12 |
2 | 0

Also In Europe we have been doing all these things. Manufacturers are downsizing their cars drastically. At this point you can get a Focus with a 1L engine and it doesn’t suck.

Many people use alternative fuels and hybrids over here and we have less people on the road and more people on public transport.

I’m surprised these things haven’t caught on in the US yet.

02/06/2016 - 11:46 |
10 | 0

HAVE A MILLION UPVOTES BECAUSE THAT’S AS TRUE AS IT GETS

02/06/2016 - 19:06 |
0 | 0

Why?

02/07/2016 - 02:57 |
0 | 0
Sumpan1337
02/06/2016 - 10:12 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

More expensive? Please no. Gas price is low in the Netherlands but its still 6$ per gallon. Also I HATE electric cars.

Btw the high fuel price made the engines absolutely horrible. Nobody can really produce high quality engines without error codes every 20 KM’s. That’s where the high gas price has brought us

02/06/2016 - 10:15 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

I don’t really notice the changes in petrol prices. That’s because my car drives with LPG. Thats cheap since some years now because everyone is focused on electric cars as “the alternative”. :)
In Germany I pay about 0.52 € per Liter LPG which makes it damn cheap to drive.

02/06/2016 - 10:19 |
0 | 0
Abdul Ramzan

As a car guy, i enjoy to low prices. As someone who has studied the effects of international stocks including fuel, it worries me

02/06/2016 - 10:25 |
0 | 0
Dan Dominé

Regardless of if you like it or not, there is a good reason why the Petrol has gone down in price and that’s the fight against terrorism, believe it or not.
The OPEC has reduced the price considerably so that Daesh (Islamic State) would have problems financing its activities. As you know, they captured a lot of oil wells in Syria and made a lot of money selling the oil on the black market. Bombing their convoys and reducing the price of oil is the only thing we could do to cripple their cash flow.

It’s not because someone found new oil fields… So why not rejoice that we are fighting against terrorism by paying less at the fuel pump.

02/06/2016 - 10:50 |
11 | 0

But that’s only part of it. The real reason for cheap oil was because the sanctions on Iran were lifted, so oil production dramatically increase, lowering the overall price of oil.

02/06/2016 - 12:22 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

It doesn’t give you a better engine, it gives you an engine that will break apart after 5 years or so.

02/06/2016 - 10:57 |
2 | 1
Anonymous

Just jump to europe. and u are welcome.

02/06/2016 - 11:01 |
4 | 0