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    1. Source? Here in Germany rightwingers love to claim that fuel got more expensive in Germany while all our neighbors had no increase.

    2. Made the world map, bar chart, and legend all with D3.js, converted to SVG, imported in Canva, and did the rest in that.

      Feb 23 prices from an [AlJazeera article](https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/11/which-countries-have-seen-the-highest-petrol-prices-since-the-iran-war) earlier in March, and the current prices from [globalpetrolprices.com](http://globalpetrolprices.com). Some countries that didn’t have Feb 23 prices listed by AlJazeera, % increase was not calculated and directly found from this [globalpetrolprices.com](https://www.globalpetrolprices.com/fuel_price_trend_Iran_war.php) page.

    3. The_Frostweaver on

      Oil went from $65 to $110

      How can gas prices not have gone up even 10%?

      Gas prices in the USA went from $3/gal to $4/gal and everything I’ve heard leads me to believe it’s similarly bad or worse everywhere.

    4. * Since the US and Israel launched a completely unjustified and futile war against Iran that they are now losing badly.

      Fixed it for you.

    5. iannoyyou101 on

      Funny how the US that is supposedly producing their own oil sees the largest increase in the western world ? Lmao

    6. ChooCupcakes on

      Italy removed some taxes from fuel to slow the price hike. *TEMPORARILY*

    7. For Bangladesh, our Gasoline, oil and gas prices are fixed and subsidized by the Government and any increase would be a very unpopular move. But if this energy crisis continues, the country will be bankrupt and a famine would be the most likely scenario. This chart doesn’t mean sh*t. If gas price increases in the world market, it increases everywhere except those who produce most of it.

    8. Im UK based and my local costco fuel has gone up 22%. Curious how its averaging 12.

    9. Nigeria has literal oil fields in their country?!!!!!! What is wrong with them?

    10. So it hurts the west, especially USA, but Russia is okay…

      Trump is a russian agent.

    11. fuzzy_curly on

      Why the decision to make the cutoff for blue/red at 10%?
      It feels unintuitive to me

    12. Fuel prices in Ireland have gone up by 25%. They dropped briefly when excise was lowered by a few cents but either way, this isn’t accurate…..for Ireland at least.

    13. Chile got rid of a mechanism that would soften price spikes while increasing gas tax on lower price periods.

      32% increase for gas and 60% for diesel in just one week.

    14. what’s the point of using a diverging colour scheme if you’re going to make blue represent both positive values and negative values

    15. As an Aussie I wish the fuckers that started this shit were hurting more than us.

    16. FireTempest on

      Malaysia has kept fuel prices the same for citizens via subsidies. The only change is the quota has gone down from 300L per month to 200L. The price that has gone up is the unsubsidized price for non citizens.

      Government’s subsidy bill just shot through the roof but they will be covering part of that with increased profits from oil & gas exports.

    17. PM_me_a_nip on

      We should start normalizing using the proper land mass proportioned map 

    18. PikaPikaDude on

      Light blue for rise, but dark blue for drop.

      If only other colors existed that could be used to place between blue and red.

    19. Hashtag doubt. Poland froze prices legally. Germany went from 1.70 to over 2.00 per liter ($8 per US gallon)

    20. In the uk it’s 26% not 10% as stated here. I think this information is already well out of date

    21. Hmm, I’m at the border of Sweden and Finland. Lots of traffic from Finland to Sweden, because the gas is cheaper there.

    22. Levistrauss81 on

      I’ve been following the recent fuel price spikes after the escalation in Iran, and what’s happening here in Italy feels… frustratingly familiar.

      Right after the conflict started, fuel prices jumped almost overnight — roughly +25 to +40 cents per liter, especially in the north and on highways. The speed of that increase was honestly impressive.

      What’s harder to understand is what happened next. The government stepped in and cut fuel taxes by about €0.25 per liter — first for 20 days, and now extended through the end of April. In theory, that should have helped stabilize or even reduce prices at the pump.

      But prices are still going up.

      And here’s the part that really gets me: when oil prices rise, everything reacts instantly. When they fall back to “normal” levels, prices at the pump seem to drift down at a painfully slow pace — if at all.

      It’s the same old story. Individually, people here can be clever, resourceful, even brilliant. But there’s also this widespread mindset of trying to outsmart the system — or each other — and feeling proud of it. In the long run, that attitude doesn’t make anyone richer; it just drags the whole system down.

      Curious to hear if others are seeing the same pattern in their countries.

    23. NO. in Latvia (EU) prices dramatically increase just BEFORE the Iran War began

    24. im from Bosnia and increase in price was more than 50% by this chart it seems like its „only“ 20% so your data may be incorrect

    25. The rulers of the most corrupt countries are having the time of their lives profiting from this crisis at the suffering of their public.

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