The four Atlantic provinces are different from most of their Canadian counterparts when it comes to buying petroleum fuels (gasoline, diesel, heating oil and propane). Unlike elsewhere in Canada, the Atlantic provinces regulate the prices of most or all these fuels. (Quebec stopped regulating gasoline and diesel prices in 2025).
What are petroleum fuel pricing regulations?
Petroleum fuel pricing regulations typically fix the price, the maximum price and/or the minimum price of petroleum fuels depending on the province and the fuel type.
Why do the Atlantic provinces regulate petroleum fuel prices?
Atlantic provinces started regulating petroleum fuel prices for several reasons. The Government of Newfoundland and Labrador started regulating gasoline, diesel, furnace and stove oil, and propane prices in 2001. The provincial government’s goal was to “restore consumer confidence and ensure price changes occur on a regular basis.” Petroleum fuel prices across the before were more volatile (many sudden high or low prices). Other public concerns prior to price regulation included a lack of transparency in retail prices, and supply certainty for smaller, rural retailers.
Who determines petroleum fuel prices in Atlantic Canada?
The power to regulate fuel prices lies with the provinces rather than the federal government (though the federal government has some authority to intervene in the case of a national emergency). However, just because they can, doesn’t mean that they do.
Not all provinces choose to regulate fuel prices. In the four Atlantic provinces, governments have chosen to do so through an independent energy or utility board or commission.
In Atlantic Canada, the regulators are:
- The New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board;
- The Nova Scotia Energy Board;
- The Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission (Prince Edward Island); and,
- The Board of Commissioners of Public Utilities, also known as the Public Utilities Board (Newfoundland and Labrador).
Which petroleum fuel prices are regulated in Atlantic Canada?
The Atlantic provinces all use a similar structure to regulate petroleum fuel prices. Each province starts with a benchmark wholesale price; adds different mark-ups for sales margins, delivery costs, emission compliance; and adds taxes to get to final prices.
In New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador, regulators set a maximum price. In Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, regulators set a price range (with minimum and maximum prices). Each province allows prices to vary based on regional zones (to capture added delivery costs).
How does each province regulate petroleum fuel prices?
What is a carbon adjustor cost?
New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador currently allow specific price increases relating to the federal Clean Fuel Regulations (CFR). The prices and names of this carbon price vary slightly by province. Prince Edward Island’s doesn’t have a specific increase, but similar costs passed on by refineries are captured in its rack price.
The Clean Fuel Regulations require fuel refineries to reduce the emission-intensity of their products over time. Refineries can use a combination of investments in their infrastructure, biofuel blending and purchasing carbon credits to meet annual CFR targets. These compliance costs were expected to be passed on to end-consumers. In unregulated markets, it is assumed they are included in the retail price consumers pay. The federal government expects compliance costs to be higher in Atlantic Canada than elsewhere in the country.
Oil and refined petroleum products are traded globally and reflect global markets. Without passing on CFR compliance costs to end consumers, local fuel retailers (and wholesalers) would likely sell products at a loss or not purchase fuels, which could result in supply challenges or force some retailers out of business.
What are the pros and cons of regulating petroleum fuels in Atlantic Canada?
The theory is that regulating petroleum fuel prices provides more transparency to help them understand prices today and why they change. It is expected that regulated pricing helps provide more predictable, stable prices for these fuels.
Regulated pricing has an administrative burden for government regulators, which adds costs for taxpayers or ratepayers.
There is conflicting evidence about whether regulated pricing has any impact on the end cost of regulated petroleum fuels.
According to data from the Kent Group Ltd. (acquired by Kalibrate in 2019), gasoline prices in Saint John, NB “went from an average of 2.4 cents per litre higher than the national average in the 10 years before regulation (in 2006), to an average of 1.1 cents below in the decade after (2016).”
In contrast, according to the federal government, “Most evidence suggests that eliminating competition through regulation, while making prices more stable, does not lead to lower fuel prices for consumers.”

Source: Statistics Canada. Table 18-10-0001-01 Monthly average retail prices for gasoline and fuel oil, by geography. Note: In June 2016, gasoline prices increased in Newfoundland and Labrador after the provincial government doubled its provincial tax (source).
What role will regulated petroleum fuel pricing play in Atlantic Canada’s net-zero future?
It is unclear how regulated petroleum fuel pricing will change, if at all, as Atlantic Canada transitions to net zero.
It is reasonable to expect that any increasing emission reduction costs, or new ones added, would be passed transparently to consumers. This transparency could help maintain public confidence but could also undermine support for policies that try to reduce emissions.
Resources:
- New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board: Petroleum Products
- Nova Scotia Energy Board: Gasoline & Diesel Prices & Zones Map
- Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission: Petroleum Product Pricing Methodology
- Board of Commissioners of Public Utilities: Petroleum Products – How Prices are Set
- Board of Commissioners of Public Utilities: History of Petroleum Products Pricing Regulation
- Natural Resources Canada: Why Canada Doesn’t Regulate Crude Oil and Fuel Prices
- Statistics Canada: Monthly average retail prices for gasoline and fuel oil, by geography
- Canada Gazette, Part II, Volume 156, Number 14, Clean Fuel Regulations: SOR/2022-140: Regulatory Impact Analysis Statement



