Rising heating oil costs push more low-income Nova Scotians to ask for help, says charity - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Rising heating oil costs push more low-income Nova Scotians to ask for help, says charity

The price of home heating oil has reached close to $2 per litre in Nova Scotia 50 per cent higher than this time last year. This has organizations that work with low-income people worried about what's to come over the winter.

Parker Street Food and Furniture Bank sees applications double for furnace oil aid

a woman wears a red shirt stands near a rack of clothing.
Parker Street Food and Furniture Bank executive director Denise Daley says more clients are asking for help with home heating costs this year. (Robert Short/CBC)

The cost of home heating oil is 50 per cent higher than it was this time last year, and low-income Nova Scotians are already feeling the crunch.

Denise Daley,the executive director of Parker Street Food and Furniture Bank in Halifax, is seeingfood bank clients having to choose between paying for food andmedication orhome heating. It's making her worry about the winter months.

According to Natural Resources Canada, the average weekly price of furnace oilin Halifax is above two dollarsper litre.Daley said as the price climbs, her organization is seeing an unprecedented demand for assistance.

"We are overwhelmed with applications at this time for our emergency assistance fund, but we're trying our utmost best to catch up and to meet the demands that we're seeing," Daley said in an interview Tuesday."At this point, we have paused the fund because of the plethora of applications that are in."

Daley said Parker Street'semergency assistance fund can be used for medication, heatingor electricity costs, and is paid directly to the utility or pharmacy. The maximum the organization can pay at a time is $200, in order to help the most families possible.

Daley said inflation in all areas of life is taking its toll on many Nova Scotians. She said usually electricity is the most common bill that's out of people's reach, but furnace oil is creeping up.

"So far we we're at 80 [families asking for help with oil], compared to last year, being about 40 for oil assistance. So it's definitely climbing," Daley said, adding they're expecting more requests whenthey reopen applications.

Applications also opened Monday for the province'sHeating Assistance Rebate Program, which provides up to $200 to helplow-income Nova Scotianswith home heating costs.

Low inventory causing high prices

Vijay Muralidharan, managing director of Calgary-based RCube Economic Consulting, says the rising cost of heating oil is mostly being caused bylow inventoriesaround the world.

"So Russia's war on Ukraine created high gas prices. Now when you have high gas prices, low-income countriesor middle-income countries [that] run on gashave to look for alternatives. What's the alternative? Diesel fuel and heating oil," Muralidharan said.

He said with higher demand, refineries haven't been able to keep up, and stocks have been depleted.

"We are entering this winter season with the lowest stock ever recorded in the history," he said."This isunforeseen."

And Muralidharanpredictsprices will continue to climbas the weather coolsand the European Union embargo onRussian oil and gas begins in December.

Daley is concerned about what this means for the food bank's clients, but has hope.

"We are worried, however we have faith in the community because once we have funds, we give it out," she said. "The more funds we get in our emergency assistance fund, the more people we can assist. So we have faith in the community that they'll come on out and send a donation."

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