From 12
March to 18 March, RON97 and unsubsidised RON95 petrol prices rose by 60
sen per litre, while diesel prices in Peninsular Malaysia rose by 80 sen per
litre. Although subsidised RON95 remains capped at RM1.99 per litre, the
government's bill for the BUDI95 subsidy will climb. If the ongoing Middle East
conflict drags on, the cost could run into billions of ringgit.
Image via FMT
Image via Dialog Group (Facebook)
The data from DOSM separates Malaysia's oil and gas trade into three main categories:
·
Crude
petroleum and condensate
·
Refined
petroleum products
·
Liquefied
natural gas (LNG)
Crude petroleum and condensates are raw hydrocarbons extracted from
underground before any processing takes place.
These raw materials are then sent to refineries, where they are turned into
finished fuels. Those finished fuels fall under refined petroleum
products, which include everyday fuels such as:
·
RON95
petrol
·
RON97
petrol
· Diesel
Meanwhile, LNG comes from natural gas, which is cooled to extremely low temperatures until it becomes liquid.
Because Malaysia produces high-grade crude oil, countries with refineries that can process light crude efficiently — such as Japan, South Korea, and Australia — are natural buyers. Their refineries can convert Malaysian crude into higher yields of valuable products such as gasoline and jet fuel. Neighbouring countries like Thailand and Singapore are also frequent buyers due to shorter shipping distances and well-established logistics networks, said Yeah.
So, the impact on our trade balance for petroleum is less pronounced than a country wholly dependent on imports like India, China or Thailand. We are blessed with sweet crude and net effect could even be positive if we produce/extract more fossil fuels to balance-out any imports of crude oil.
The other option for the Government is to accelerate use of electric vehicles, more solar for residential houses, renewables in the overall generation mix. We need to be intentional even if conditions improve (i.e. crude oil prices drop). To do so, the Government has to draw-up a short-term (6-12 months) plan to reduce use of fossil fuels for transport, industry or homes. We have a longer-term plan to 2050, but that is too far forward to have an impact today. Incentives removed may need to be reintroduced and more aggressive efforts made to wean away from fossil fuel.
Reference:
Explained: Why does
Malaysia import oil & gas despite producing its own? Says.com, 12 March 2026






