Heating oil prices rise by more than £100 amid Middle East conflict

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Niall Glynn and Hayley HalpinBBC News NI

Getty Images A person with dirty orange gloves holds onto to a metal hose connected to a heating oil tank.Getty Images

Quotes for home heating oil in Northern Ireland have jumped in less than a week

Prices for home heating oil have spiked in Northern Ireland amid the conflict in the Middle East - with some more than £100 more expensive than last week.

However, the price for the same amount from one provider in County Armagh was £395 on Monday. Another provider in County Down was selling 500 litres for £425.

Almost two-thirds of homes (62.5%) in Northern Ireland use oil for heating, the highest proportion of the UK nations.

The CCNI said crude oil prices are "rising and remain unpredictable in the short term" due to the conflict but they are monitoring the situation.

Iran warned vessels not to pass through the crucial waterway in the south of the country, through which about 20% of the world's oil and gas is shipped.

'One more thing to stomach'

BBC News NI also spoke to people in Belfast city centre about the impact rising oil prices will have on their lives.

Ben Turner said the public has accepted "various different costs for a long time" and this is another rise "you have to stomach".

Ben Turner is shaven-headed and is wearing black-framed glasses. He is wearing a dark blue coat and is standing in the grounds of Belfast City Hall

Ben Turner says rising fuel prices will affect people's travel decisions

He added that rising fuel prices will only add to "already tight budgets".

"It'll be that factor on day trips, particularly with the nicer weather now, but actually will that trip up to the north coast cost that little bit more if the fuel prices go up? So that will be a factor in planning," said Turner.

Natalie (on the right) has long dark hair and is smiling. She is wearing a dark coat and holding a purse. Her friend has long blond hair and is wearing a long grey coat

Natalie (right) said she uses heating oil in her home and the rise will add to the pressure of daily living costs

Natalie, from Glengormley, said the rise in home heating oil costs puts a "lot of pressure" on households.

"It's just really another added pressure with the cost of living in general and now with the oil prices going up, just everything's become much more expensive," she said.

She added: "Really, it's been groceries as well, everything's just gone up in general."

Kenneth McClernon has short brown hair slicked back and a long ginger/grey beard. Her is wearing an armless denim jacket with patches on heavy metal groups on it and a green hoodie

Kenneth McClernon said the constant rise in fuel prices means he walks more than drives

Kenneth McClernon said he will be most affected if car fuel prices go up.

"It's been going up and up and up and I've never seen it come down; very rarely it comes down," he said.

"With everything being the price it is now, you're better walking."

Barbara Foster is an older woman with light blond hair and sunglasses. She is standing in Belfast City Hall

Barbara Foster said she hopes the situation is temporary

Barbara Foster from Portstewart said all consumers can do is "hope for the best".

"Hopefully it won't be very long that this goes on for, then we've got the summer coming up so hopefully by the autumn things [will] have got more stable."

'Heaven knows what price it will go to'

Motoring journalist Ian Lynas, from Portadown, said he is concerned that oil prices will be an issue for months to come.

"This affects everybody, the small business man, somebody at the green grocery shop or the clothes shop in the small town or the big town, they're going to find their heating costs are up," he said.

Lynas purchased 500 litres of home heating oil on Friday for £309. He said he checked the price again on Monday morning and it had risen to £415.

Ian Lynas An older man, with grey hair, sitting in a blue Audi car. The picture is taken from outside the driver side, with the door open. The man is wearing jeans and a blue coat. His hands are on the steering wheel. Ian Lynas

Ian Lynas is concerned home heating oil prices will remain high for some time

Tips for finding the cheapest oil

The CCNI's advice for customers is not to settle for the first quote you receive and that it is best to buy in bulk.

The organisation also advises consumers to join a heating oil buying group, which sees communities pool orders from multiple households to negotiate better rates from suppliers.

The NI Housing Executive also has an oil savings network which is free to join and open to all households who either own or rent their home, while the NI Oil Federation also offers a pre-payment scheme,

Fuel stamps also allow residents to budget and spread the cost by purchasing stamps from local retailers and using them to pay for their oil delivery.

Reasons for NI spike 'unclear'

John CampbellEconomics and business editor, BBC News NI

The global wholesale price of oil rose by about 6% on Monday.

That was a relatively modest increase given the gravity of the situation unfolding in the Middle East.

It took the price of a barrel of Brent Crude to just under $80, far below the peaks of more than $100 seen after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

However some people have told BBC NI they have seen the price of home heating oil jump by more than 30% since the weekend.

The reasons for that much larger increase are unclear and are likely to remain so given that heating oil companies do not have to explain themselves to a regulator.

As ever, the advice for consumers is to shop around.

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