The UAE has increased fuel prices by more than 30 percent month-on-month in April following a surge in the cost of crude oil since the start of the Iran conflict.
Diesel prices jumped more than 70 percent, state-owned energy company Emirates General Petroleum (Emarat) said on social messaging platform X.
The price of Super 98 gasoline rose 31 percent to AED3.39 ($0.92) per litre starting April 1, from AED2.59 in March. Special 95 spiked by 32 percent to AED3.28 from AED2.48, while E-plus 91 jumped 33 percent to AED3.20 from AED2.40.
Diesel prices rose 72 percent to AED4.69 per litre, from AED2.72 last month.
Front-month Brent crude futures had climbed $1.40, or 1.4 percent, to $105.37 per barrel by 04:30 GMT on Wednesday. Brent logged a record monthly gain of 64 percent in March.
US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday he may end the war with Iran before reopening the Strait of Hormuz, a trade route through which 20 percent of global oil and LNG flows, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Fuel costs across the UAE were deregulated from August 2015 as the government adopted a new policy linked to global prices.
The energy and finance ministries serve as the government’s representatives on a committee that reviews fuel prices monthly.
In the US, gasoline prices have topped $4 a gallon for the first time in almost four years, according to the American Automobile Association.
In the UK, gasoline rose to 152.8 pence ($2.03) a litre, its highest in two years and around 20 pence more than at the start of the war, the BBC reported, quoting data from the RAC motoring organisation.

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