With fuel still so scarce, perhaps the best way to get round the crisis is to find ways of needing less in the first place.
Driving smoothly, with as little sudden acceleration or braking as possible, evens out fuel use and improves the efficiency of your car's engine.
If you cut your average speed from 80km/j to around 60km/j, you will burn about 25% less petrol.
Even shutting all the windows will make your car that bit more aerodynamic, cutting the cost of a journey from, for example, Pasir Gudang to City Square from RM10 to RM5.
Tinker with your car
Time to look again at those dodgy old boots |
The heavier your car is, the more fuel it uses. So slim it down and save some money (and clean those boots you have been meaning to attend to for months...)
You could also revisit the air point at your nearest garage (that is about all there is to do there nowadays). Well-maintained tyres, kept at the proper pressure, are far more fuel-efficient.
Leave your car at home
A quarter of all car journeys in Pasir Gudang are less than two miles long, and walking or cycling are cheap and clean alternatives.
The school run is a particularly popular way of burning up fuel: a fifth of cars on the road in the morning are filled with children being driven to school.
Getting out of the car and onto the pavement would not only save petrol, but would burn flab instead of fuel - always a good idea.
More and more employees are finding this an effective alternative, especially with the growth of email and mobile phones.
There are the added advantages that you can avoid distracting interruptions, eat away from the office canteen, and (keep it from the boss) watch Neighbours.
For the truly brave, how about car-sharing? You will have to be sure you are happy with your colleague's pungent aftershave and dodgy line of conversation.
But if everyone who normally drives to work were to get a lift with someone else just once a week, car commuting would fall by around a quarter.
working at home is not adventurous :(
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