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AAP
AAP
Politics
Aaron Bunch

Cashed-up state buys own strategic diesel stockpile

As diesel prices remain high and the fuel crisis continues, WA is establishing its own fuel reserve. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)

Australia's wealthiest state has splashed its cash and bought millions of litres of diesel - and it won't be sharing it.

Western Australia has struck a deal to buy and store four million litres of diesel in the Kimberley region, Premier Roger Cook says.

"This is a crucial step towards shoring up our state's fuel security into the future," he told reporters on Monday.

"It will be 100 per cent owned by the state (and) that means it can be directed to where it is needed most.

"It will also make WA the first state in the nation to develop its own strategic stockpile."

BP and local independent fuel supplier Cambridge Gulf will import the diesel from overseas, and it is expected to arrive in WA in the coming weeks.

It's expected to cost WA taxpayers $10 million.

"We are the largest single jurisdiction in the world," WA Energy Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson said.

Diesel
Energy Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson says it makes sense for WA to have its own diesel stockpile. (Richard Wainwright/AAP PHOTOS)

"We have specific needs, which is why we need to have our own stockpile."

The fuel will be used to bolster supplies to industry and remote communities during shortages and won't be made available to the general public or shared with other jurisdictions.

The state has enough trucks to distribute the extra fuel, Ms Sanderson said.

The WA government is considering buying an additional 12 million litres of diesel and storing it at the same Wyndham facility.

It's also looking at buying and storing diesel in other parts of the state.

Opposition energy spokesman Steve Thomas said four million litres sounded like a lot, but was just a quarter of the diesel WA used every day.

WA uses about six billion litres of diesel annually, or 16.4 million litres daily, on average, mostly in the transport, mining and agriculture sectors.

Curtin University sustainability expert Peter Newman previously described WA's plan to develop a state-based diesel stockpile, independent of national fuel reserves, as "desperately stupid".

"It's going to be very expensive and difficult to even access that (extra) diesel and petrol (on the global market)," he said.

In comparison, he said it was a "no-brainer" for Australia to speed up the transition to electrified transport.

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