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FuelWatch is a fuel monitoring service created by the Government of Western Australia.It was established by the Government of Western Australia in January 2001. On 2 January 2001 FuelWatch commenced daily monitoring of prices for petrol, diesel and LPG within metropolitan Perth and many regional areas in the South West of the state. [1]
General highways map of Western Australia Western Australia has extensive long-distance highways with few localities along them. Privately owned general stores known as roadhouses have been established at strategic points as an important utility for petrol, food, accommodation, emergency facilities and general supplies. They are also useful reference points in any response to accidents, floods ...
WAPET later discovered in 1964 the first commercial natural gas field in Western Australia, at Dongara in the Perth Basin. [7] In 1998, the federal government discontinued fuel price regulation. However, the Victorian and Western Australian state governments passed their own price control legislations in 2000. [8]
Western Australia's sedimentary basins. Five of the seven major sedimentary basins in Western Australia have known hydrocarbon accumulations,with 2007–08 production coming from the Carnarvon, Perth, Bonaparte and Canning basins. Sixty-one fields were on production during 2007–08 fiscal year. [9]
Location of Overlander in Western Australia (red) The Overlander Roadhouse is a petrol service station in Western Australia, between Geraldton and Carnarvon on the North West Coastal Highway. Its remoteness has led to the area around it being known as Overlander, though there is no such official locality. Due to the isolation, nearby station ...
Regular fuel also saw a decline of $0.41. Franklin is where fuel prices have fallen most significantly in the state, with the price of a gallon of regular fuel plummeting by $0.64, from $4.12 to ...
Kewdale Freight Terminal is a large intermodal rail facility in the Perth suburb of Kewdale, Western Australia. Branching off the Kwinana freight railway, it was built in the 1960s to replace the Perth marshalling yard. It initially comprised ten narrow gauge (1067mm) and seven standard gauge (1435mm) arrival roads. [1]
Shell's involvement in Australia began in 1901 when bulk fuel handling facilities commissioned by the 'Shell' Transport and Trading Company of London at Gore Bay, Sydney and on leased land in Melbourne, near Williamstown railway station. The arrival of the ship Turbo on 3 June was the first ever delivery of bulk kerosene to Australia. [1]