
Hours after Germany's upper house of parliament, the Bundesrat, approved a package of measures to curb high fuel prices, President Frank-Walter Steinmeier signed plan into law on Friday.
The bill officially takes effect once it is published in the Federal Law Gazette. The package of measures had only been passed by the Bundestag, or lower house of parliament, on Thursday.
Ahead of the busy Easter travel period, the new law allows petrol stations to raise prices only once per day, at noon (1100 GMT).
Previously, fuel prices were changing sometimes hourly, due to the US-Israeli war in Iran. Price cuts, however, will still be possible at any time.
In addition, Germany's competition authority is to receive more powers to act against excessive prices. In future, companies will have to explain that price increases are objectively justified.
This is intended to make it significantly easier for regulators to take action against excessive fuel pricing.
Whopping 80% say law is inadequate
Although by German standards the law passed very quickly, residents are not impressed.
A clear majority of people in Germany believe the government's measures against rising fuel prices are inadequate, with 80% of respondents surveyed saying not enough is being done, the ZDF's Politbarometer poll released on Friday showed.
Some 14% consider the measures appropriate while 3% say they go too far.
Many people are calling for a temporary cut in taxes and levies on petrol and diesel, the survey found. Some 73% support such a step while 25% oppose it. That's backed by a majority across most party supporters, with only Green party supporters showing a split picture.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Council removes proposal to rename park named after former president of Israel - 2
UN torture cm'tee report flags Israel for allegedly mistreating journalists, detainees, ex-MAG - 3
Elite Execution Wall televisions for Film Darlings - 4
Figure out how to Keep up with Your Dental Inserts for Long haul Achievement - 5
2024 Moving Styles for Kitchen Redesigns
OECD: Iran war dampening global growth
Study shows no clear link between low-fat dairy and dementia risk
Drones haven't won the fight in Ukraine. That matters as the West learns new ways of war.
Pick Your Favored kind of soup
See tonight’s solar storm unfold across the world
Obamacare enrollment declines as US subsidies expire
What to expect from the planets in 2026 — key dates and sky events
The most effective method to Apply Antiquated Ways of thinking in Current Brain science Practices
NASA unveils close-up pictures of the comet popping by from another star













