Where is the most expensive gasoline in the world? Of course, in Hong Kong, where you will have to pay about 3 euros (309.49 rubles) per liter of fuel. And where is it the cheapest? In Venezuela, where government-regulated prices allow you to fill your tank with a liter of “ecological green” gasoline for just 2 eurocents (2.06 rubles).
The International Consumer Association CODACONS has compiled a map of world gasoline prices. The lowest prices are also noted in Iran, at 3 eurocents per liter (3.09 rubles), a little more than in Venezuela, but still extremely cheap. Very inexpensive gasoline is sold in Kuwait (0.25 euros per liter, or 25.79 rubles), as well as in Egypt, Algeria, and Angola, where gasoline costs 30 cents, or 30.95 rubles, per liter.
The highest prices are in Europe. In Iceland (2.2 euros per liter, or 226.96 rubles), in the Netherlands (2.13 euros per liter, or 219.74 rubles), followed by Denmark, Greece, Finland, and Italy – all above 2 euros (206.33 rubles) per liter. Slightly lower prices are in France (1.97 euros, 203.23 rubles) and Germany (1.94 euros, 200.14 rubles). The lowest price in Europe is in Poland (1.31 euros per liter, 135.14 rubles), in Malta (1.34 euros, 138.24 rubles), and in Bulgaria (1.45 euros, 149.59 rubles).