13 Comments

    1. jason_abacabb on

      Multiply by 3.8 and 1.18 to get dollars per us gallon.

      So 2 euro per liter is nearly 9 dollars a gallon at current conversion.

    2. Sarcastic-Potato on

      There are two other statistics which are very interesting in relation to that (saw them yesterday, I’ll see if I can find them again).

      One is fuel price in relation to average salary
      The other one is how much % of the fuel is taxes

    3. Groentekroket on

      Our Dutch government think this is fine. I still need to go to the office while I have a job I could easily do from home but my employer wants me there because “communications are better”. Meanwhile half the team is calling in from India. 

      The government says “this is for the employee together with the employer to decide, we are not going to interfere with that”. My boss is only paying 19 cent/km so he doesn’t give a shit that prices are higher so I’m fucked over here. 

    4. Inductiekookplaat on

      When I was in Australia and New Zealand I was amazed how cheap the petrol was there (coming from The Netherlands)

    5. You should start the y-axis at 0 in a case like this.

      And it needs to be shown adjusted by purchasing power.

    6. BelethorsGenGoods on

      I forgot to fill up my rental Pugeot 3008 the other day before returning it in Munich. It had 5/8ths of a tank when I dropped it off, so they had to put in ~20 liters, and with their surcharge that was 95 EUR.

    7. Just curious, what map platform do you use? The Russian one? It’s very unusual that the map represents Ukraine without Crimea and its eastern parts.

    8. what is the logic behind the richest countries having the highest prices? is that just all tax?
      If anything, you would expect the poor countries to be paying more..

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