News and media | Fair Work Commission
The Fair Work Commission is Australia's workplace tribunal. We create awards, approve enterprise agreements and help resolve issues at work.
www.fwc.gov.auHere’s what’s latest on the Fair Work Commission fuel issue, based on recent reports:
The Fair Work Commission in Australia issued a landmark order requiring top-level supply-chain players (retailers, miners, and other end-users of transport services) to conduct regular fuel-cost reviews and adjust payments to owner-drivers and transport operators to cover rising diesel costs. The measures are designed to relieve pressure on transport operators amid surging fuel prices, with reviews set to occur bi-monthly. [source: TWU press release; ABC News coverage][1][2]
The policy is framed as part of recent amendments and regulatory actions intended to stabilize road transport costs across the supply chain, affecting major retailers such as Coles, Woolworths, and Amazon, and extending to other contracted transport operators. Economists and industry groups have noted potential pass-through effects to consumer prices, though the immediate aim is to prevent insolvencies among independent drivers and small operators.[2][8][1]
The regulator’s action aligns with the Fair Work Commission’s broader push under the new Fairer Fuel framework, with ongoing discussions and related guidance published by the commission and industry bodies. The impact is being monitored by industry associations and media outlets as it unfolds in April 2026.[4][5][7]
If you’d like, I can pull more detailed summaries from these sources or track developments over the next few weeks and present a concise timeline. Here are suggested next steps:
The Fair Work Commission is Australia's workplace tribunal. We create awards, approve enterprise agreements and help resolve issues at work.
www.fwc.gov.auThe Fair Work Commission (FWC) has today handed down a landmark order, delivering hope for drivers and transport operators pushed to the brink by soaring fuel costs to save their businesses, ahead of a looming fuel debt cliff. The order will take effect tomorrow 21 April. The order, following an application by the TWU and […]
www.twu.com.auIn The Australian, AREEA Chief Executive Steve Knott Steve Knott warns that the Fair Work Commission’s landmark order passing owner driver fuel costs through to companies at the top of the supply chain is ‘extraordinarily broad” and will impact entire contractual chains in the road transport industry.
www.areea.com.auThe Fair Work Commission orders that retailers, miners and other companies that use truck drivers and transport operators must hold twice-monthly reviews of fuel prices and adjust their rates…
www.abc.net.auFWC and Government action related to the road transport industry and organisations that rely on it in response to fuel price increases
www.australianindustrygroup.com.auThe Fair Work Commission is Australia's workplace tribunal. We create awards, approve enterprise agreements and help resolve issues at work.
www.fwc.gov.auThe Fair Work Commission has mandated adjustments to transport rates to help operators recover rising fuel costs, effective April 2026.
apga.org.auAgainst this backdrop, on 14 April 2026, the Fair Work Commission (FWC) took the unusual step of issuing a draft Road Transport Contractual Chain Order (MS2026/1) seeking an enforced mandatory fuel cost recovery mechanism/s in the road transport industry. The proposed order requires primary parties to adjust pay rates fortnightly to ensure fuel cost recovery for contractors and workers, with consultation open until April 17, 2026. This move signals a materially stronger regulatory intervention...
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