When a government raids 630 petrol stations looking for price gougers and finds that 95% of them were charging legal prices, there are two possible interpretations. The first is that France’s fuel market is remarkably well-regulated and mostly honest. The second is that the regulations define gouging so narrowly, and the legitimate price increases driven by global supply disruption are so large, that most of the damage to French consumers is happening entirely within the rules. The French data points heavily toward the second interpretation.
The Inspection Campaign Confirmed the Wrong Problem
France’s Direction Generale de la Concurrence, de la Consommation et de la Repression des Fraudes—the fraud watchdog—carried out inspections at more than 630 petrol stations across France in the weeks following the Strait of Hormuz closure. The stated objective was to identify and penalise pricing abuses: stations charging margins significantly above the market rate, exploiting panic-buying and supply uncertainty to extract excess profit from motorists.
The result: approximately 5% of inspected stations were found in violation and fined. That 5% figure is not a vindication of the French fuel retail sector. It is a map of where the actual problem does not live. Retail petrol stations in France operate on thin margins; they buy from distributors, who buy from refiners, who buy crude from the global market. When Brent crude doubles from $65 to $128 per barrel in six weeks—as it effectively did between January and early April 2026—the retail pump price rises not because petrol station owners are greedy but because the commodity price has genuinely moved. Inspecting the last mile of a 10,000-mile supply chain and finding mostly clean books is the expected outcome.
Finance Minister Roland Lescure understood this when he formally requested a European Commission investigation into refinery margins. The question he was asking Brussels to answer is not whether French petrol stations are gouging consumers, but whether refiners—the companies that convert crude oil into fuel and whose margins are less publicly visible—are extracting excess profit at the wholesale level. That is a better question. It is also a harder one to answer quickly, and the Commission investigation will produce results on a timescale measured in months, not weeks.
What Ordinary French Drivers Are Actually Paying
Euro-super 95 in France reached €2.01 per litre by late March 2026. Diesel—the fuel of choice for the majority of French freight transport, commercial vehicles, and a significant share of private cars—hit €2.19 per litre. Both figures are above the eurozone average, though France’s relatively high tax component on fuel means that the underlying wholesale price spike translates into a larger absolute increase at the pump than in countries with lower fuel taxes.
For French households, the impact is direct. Transport costs account for approximately 13% of average French household expenditure. A sustained 40-50% increase in fuel prices—which is approximately what the Hormuz shock has produced relative to pre-war 2025 levels—represents a significant reduction in real disposable income without any offsetting wage increase. The government’s flash fuel loan scheme, announced through the Finance Ministry and delivered in partnership with Bpifrance, provides emergency working capital to small businesses facing higher operating costs. It does not reduce fuel prices. It provides a credit instrument to help businesses survive prices that the government cannot control.
The Energy Policy Gap Behind the Crisis
France is structurally better positioned than most European countries to weather an oil and gas price shock. Nuclear power generates approximately 70% of French electricity, insulating French households and industrial users from the most acute effects of the LNG supply disruption. But French roads still run on diesel and petrol. French aviation still runs on kerosene. French agricultural machinery still runs on fuel oil. The nuclear advantage buffers electricity prices; it does nothing for transport costs.
Euronews reported in April 2026 that oil and gas prices could remain elevated in Europe even if the Iran war ended immediately, because the financial risk premium attached to Middle Eastern energy supply has been fundamentally repriced. Insurance costs for tankers, the cost of rerouting LNG cargoes around the closure, and the accelerated investment in alternative supply routes all become embedded in long-term contracts well before any ceasefire. France, like every European country, is now paying for the political failure to diversify energy supply that every European government acknowledged as a priority after 2022 and none fully resolved.
What This Actually Means
The 630-station inspection campaign will be remembered not for the 5% it caught but for the 95% it cleared. France’s fuel crisis is not a regulatory failure. It is a supply chain problem with military origins, passing through global commodity markets, through refiners, through distributors, and landing on French pump prices at €2.01 per litre. No amount of fraud investigation addresses that chain. The government knows this. The flash fuel loans, the European Commission investigation, the Finance Minister’s public statements—these are political instruments designed to demonstrate activity in the face of a problem that cannot be solved domestically.
French consumers will absorb higher fuel costs for as long as the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed. The inspections told them that almost nobody is cheating them. The price at the pump tells them they’re getting hurt anyway.
Sources
Bloomberg: France Weighs Targeted Fuel Aid as Pump Costs Jump on Iran War
France in English: Fuel Prices Surge in France Amid Middle East Conflict
Euronews: Why oil and gas prices could stay high in Europe even if the Iran war ends
Connexion France: France fuel shortages – the situation department by department
Modern Ghana: France rolls out flash fuel loans to shield small firms from oil price spike