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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Jon Brady

Scots farmer forced to live in caravan after £2.25 petrol price leaves him penniless

An island crofter has claimed soaring fuel prices left him homeless and penniless.

Dad-of-three Karl Hughes says he had to sell his home on Tiree and move into a caravan after falling behind on mortgage payments.

He drives around the island delivering livestock but faces sky high diesel prices of £2.25 a litre at his local garage.

It is understood to be among the most expensive fuel in ­Scotland and costs £112.50p to fill the tank of the average
family car. Petrol sells for £2.18 a litre.

The 59-year-old told how Scots living in remote areas like his are facing a cost of living disaster because the cost of gas ­cylinders to heat their homes has also soared.

Tiree's only petrol station is charging £2.25 a litre for diesel (supplied)

Karl moved into the caravan parked on land where he keeps 20 sheep and a flock of chickens after he ran out of cash and had to sell his home.

He said: “People are having to look at car-sharing because they can’t afford to fill up. We just don’t have the money.

“I’m living in a caravan because I had to sell my croft house. It’s all coming to a head.

“People are really starting to suffer here. We’re not on the gas mains network so we’re all heating our houses with LPG gas bottles.

“They used to be about £40 and are now £60 each. In the summer, just using it for cooking, that’ll last me 10 days.”

He told how people were ­struggling with the price of food in the island’s main shop, the Co-op where they are looking out for discounted food.

Karl added: “You’re seeing it etched in everyone’s faces – people are scared. You see more people buying the yellow-­stickered food in the shop.

“The whole system is messed up. Everything feels rigged against the people who actually live here and that’s after going through Covid.

“I have to use the food bank, and I’m on Universal Credit because I don’t earn enough and there’s no extra jobs going. I’m just making ends meet.

“There’s a lot of old people here, and if we have a bad winter some of them are going to freeze to death – that’s a fact.

“I lived through Thatcher but things have never been as bad as this.

Karl says he has debated leaving Tiree for the mainland (supplied)

“After Covid, people were looking forward to having some hope. There isn’t any.” Petrol prices at Tiree’s only filling station, beside the pier at Scarinish, leapt more than 20p this week.

Andrew Watson, managing director of fuel price comparison website PetrolPrices.com, reckons Tiree could have the most ­expensive petrol in Scotland.

He said: “From the data we have this would look to be the most expensive in Scotland, although with things changing so rapidly on price it may have been overtaken.”

Frazer MacInnes, 36, has lived on Tiree all of his life and runs the Tiree Sea Tours sailing business as well as Toraz, the island’s car rental business. He said soaring fuel costs on the island have made it difficult to keep afloat.

He said: “Fuel prices are doubling in the space of a year. We’re having to pass that on to customers, which we don’t want to do, but we don’t have a choice.

“I’m certain I’ll be spending £10,000 a week on fuel in July. We’re seeing fewer customers too.”

Argyll and Bute MSP Jenni Minto says the islands need more support (Jane Barlow/PA Wire)

Managing Director of fuel price comparison website PetrolPrices.com Andrew Watson said: "From the price data we have, Tiree fuel costs are to be the most expensive in Scotland, although with things changing so rapidly on price it may have been overtaken."

Jenni Minto, SNP MSP for Argyll and Bute, says the situation in Scotland's rural communities isn't being spoken about enough.

"I have no recollection of petrol prices going up so much in such a short period of time and I've had people raise it with me a lot," she said.

"It's really impacting on how rural people live their lives because they need their cars to get about, more than in a city. I recognise the challenges and the additional costs they see.

"Bringing down the cost of fuel is within the gift of the UK Government but barely a day goes by without me speaking to somebody in the Scottish Government to tell them: 'Remember the islanders'.

"This is something I raise regularly in parliament and the Scottish Government is listening more to the way islanders operate.

"Kate Forbes, the finance secretary, has written to Westminster to talk about the increased costs in Scotland and has put forward solutions more widely: increasing social security benefits, reinstating the Universal Credit uplift and increasing the National Living Wage to the Real Living Wage.

"We are doing things but I think the fact it's being talked about can only help."

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