The future looks complicated, with rising fuel and gas prices, making it difficult to maintain a surplus perspective in public finances.
Portugal and the war in Iran: the good times are over

Context & Explainers
Higher crude oil prices raise wholesale fuel costs, and those increases typically reach Portuguese petrol and diesel pumps within days to weeks; the recent conflict has pushed oil to one‑year highs and European gas futures up roughly 40%, making fuel the first likely victim. Final pump prices also depend on taxes, VAT and distributor margins, so consumers should expect higher filling‑station bills but the exact change will reflect those tax and margin components as well as exchange rates.
Anarec is the trade association for fuel retailers and convenience stores, formally the National Association of Fuel Retailers and Convenience Stores (Associação Nacional de Revendedores de Combustíveis e de Lojas de Conveniência). Its leaders monitor and comment on retail fuel trends — for example the association’s vice-president Mafalda Trigo said diesel could rise by about €0.10 next week — so drivers and businesses should watch price updates.
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Other news coverage of this topic
- Conflict in Iran already affects Iberian electricity prices. Industry more vulnerable6:51am, 4 Mar 2026 • ECO
- Conflict could lead to significant fuel price increase in Portugal, says EPCOL10:55pm, 3 Mar 2026 • RTP Notícias
- "I am convinced that if the conflict drags on for another week or two, we will see the price of oil reaching 90 or 100 dollars"10:43pm, 3 Mar 2026 • CNN Portugal
- How much will fuel prices rise next week?8:00pm, 3 Mar 2026 • Expresso
- Diesel could rise by 15 to 20 cents next week7:06pm, 3 Mar 2026 • Observador



