Written by Aline Barakat for JNews Lebanon

It is no longer enough for citizens in Lebanon to simply wait for the bi-weekly fuel price index to be dropped like an inevitable twist of fate. The real issue today extends far beyond a routine rise or fall in the price of a single fuel canister. Instead, the crisis lies deep within the “pricing mechanism” itself—a process that operates like a black box, hiding from the public how the final price they pay out of their depleted pockets is actually calculated.
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The operational pattern has become both highly transparent and profoundly unfair: whenever global oil prices rise, consumers absorb the shock immediately at the pumps via an instantaneous price hike. Yet, when global markets decline, those reductions mysteriously vanish within the corridors of “unclear moving averages,” vague corporate margins, and a market stifled by highly limited competition. The public has every right, and indeed a duty, to ask today through JNews Lebanon: On what basis are they paying? To whom are they paying? And who is watching behind the curtain?

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The Brutal Language of Numbers: A 421,000 L.L. Surge in 4 Months

Hard data does not compromise or flatter. Prior to the disruptions associated with recent security and military events, specifically on February 24, 2026, the price of a 95-octane gasoline canister stood at 1,799,000 L.L.. However, by July 3, 2026, the price lines aggressively moved upward to hit 2,220,000 L.L..

This basic math uncovers a staggering surge of 421,000 L.L. per canister in a span of just over four months—marking an asset price increase of approximately 23.4%. In practice, this means the Lebanese citizen is now paying an additional 21,050 L.L. on every single liter of gasoline pumped into their vehicle. This cost quickly rolls down like a snowball, immediately driving up the costs of transport, distribution, neighborhood power generators, and basic commodities, effectively erasing what remains of the purchasing power of local households and small businesses.

 

 

Playing with Moving Averages and the Absence of Independent Audits

Technically, economists understand that the final price of gasoline does not track Brent crude oil prices alone. The retail pricing architecture is built upon multiple components: the global import benchmark price (Platts), freight and insurance costs, state customs and taxes, domestic distribution costs, gas station commissions, and the profit margins of importing companies.

This is precisely where the core problem lies, and where JNews Lebanon is placing the spotlight: if the benchmark price is calculated using a “moving average”—whether spanning two weeks, three weeks, or any other timeline adopted by the ministry—why does that calculation window remain completely concealed from the public? The choice of the moving average window is not a simple technical detail; it directly dictates the final consumer price. When global rates spike, the increase is passed on instantly, but during market corrections, the Lebanese consumer remains trapped paying based on an artificial average higher than the actual current global market value.
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Cartels and Limited Competition: Ambiguity Protects Profits

Far worse than the absence of itemized data is the concentration of the fuel market in Lebanon within a tightly restricted circle of players and companies. In a market suffering from “limited competition,” a lack of transparency automatically becomes a protective shield for corporate margins, parallel pricing strategies, and absolute market manipulation. Under these conditions, the citizen pays not just for the intrinsic cost of fuel, but also bears the cost of regulatory ambiguity, weak governance, and deficient official oversight.

Transparency in pricing the fuel that drives the daily bread and movement of Lebanese citizens is no longer an administrative luxury or a theoretical economic debate. It is the primary line of defense protecting the consumer’s wallet, guaranteeing market fairness, and serving as a fundamental prerequisite for economic accountability. Consequently, JNews Lebanon raises its voice to demand 5 immediate structural reforms:

  • First: Publish a fully itemized, transparent cost-breakdown sheet with every routine price update without manipulation.
  • Second: Publicly disclose the international benchmark price, specify the exact moving average window utilized, and separate state taxes from corporate margins.
  • Third: Subject the entire fuel pricing mechanism to a comprehensive, independent financial and technical audit.
  • Fourth: Activate anti-monopoly and competition oversight bodies to prevent collusive pricing and covert market control.
  • Fifth: Deploy a public digital dashboard that maps local prices against global oil market fluctuations in real-time.

Until these measures are implemented, the fuel price index will remain a financial ledger where the Lebanese public pays the price twice: once at the station, and once in the total absence of accountability and transparency!

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