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10 Mar 2026

‘People cannot simply absorb these increases’: Calls for action from Kilkenny as fuel prices rise

Diesel has already passed €2 per litre in some places as war in the Middle-East has driven up prices

‘People cannot simply absorb these increases’: Calls for action from Kilkenny as fuel prices rise

High prices at a Kilkenny forecourt over the weekend

Sinn Féín TD for Carlow/Kilkenny, Natasha Newsome Drennan has called on the government to take immediate action to protect households, farmers and small businesses as fuel prices surge following the US-Israeli attacks on Iran.

Deputy Newsome Drennan said families and workers are already struggling with the cost of living and cannot afford another wave of price increases. It follows the doubling of the cost of home heating oil in recent days.

“People are watching diesel prices climb again,” she said. “In some cases, diesel has passed €2 a litre. For thousands of workers - commuters, farmers, tradespeople and small businesses - diesel is not a luxury. It’s how they get to work and keep their livelihoods going.”

“Families are already stretched to the limit by soaring rents, sky-high grocery bills and rising energy costs. They cannot carry the burden of another fuel price shock,” she added.

Deputy Newsome Drennan criticised Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael for what she called a refusal to take meaningful action while prices continue to rise.

SEE ALSO: CK United share the spoils in close encounter with Treaty United - Kilkenny Live

“Once again the Government’s response has been to sit on its hands. People cannot wait while ministers say they are ‘monitoring the situation’. This is happening right now in households across Kilkenny and Carlow.”

The Sinn Féin TD said the Government must introduce immediate measures to protect people from the rising cost of fuel.

“Firstly, they must scrap the planned increase in carbon tax which is due to come into effect shortly. Pushing ahead with another tax increase while fuel prices are soaring would be completely out of touch.”

“Secondly the Government must now reduce the tax on petrol and diesel during this crisis. Third, they need to bring forward targeted cost-of-living supports for households already under pressure.”

Finally, there must be a serious crackdown on price gouging to ensure companies do not use this international crisis as an excuse to rip people off,” she asserted.

Deputy Newsome Drennan concluded by saying that Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael need to recognise the scale of the pressure facing ordinary people.

“People cannot simply absorb these increases. For many families, every extra euro at the pump means less money for food, heating or childcare. This is not an abstract economic issue - it is a real cost-of-living crisis affecting real people right now.”

“This Government must stop standing back and start standing up for workers, families, farmers and small businesses.”

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