SPECIAL COVERAGE
CHANDIGARH

LUDHIANA

DELHI


THE TRIBUNE SPECIALS
50 YEARS OF INDEPENDENCE

TERCENTENARY CELEBRATIONS
M A I N   N E W S

No fuel price cut for now

New Delhi, October 29
The government is not considering reduction in prices of petrol, diesel and domestic LPG, despite crude falling to its lowest-level in 15 months, as prices have to stablise at this level to wipe out the current revenue losses on fuel sales, an oil ministry official said.

“There is no proposal to reduce fuel prices. We have to watch the situation for a few more weeks,” said S. Sundareshan, additional secretary in the Oil ministry here.

The basket of crude India bought yesterday averaged at $56.72 per barrel, a level at which state-run Bharat Petroleum, Indian Oil and Hindustan Petroleum would break even if global prices were to stabilise for a month.

“Price reduction cannot be on the basis of price of one or two days. Yesterday it was at $56, today it has gone up again by $2. We need prices to stabilise before we can think of a price reduction,” he said.

The three firms, which in April-September reported a Rs 92,853 crore revenue loss (audited figure) on sale of petrol, diesel, LPG and kerosene, are likely to post bad results when they report on quartely earnings over the next two days.

“Prices need to stabilise for four weeks (at current level) for us to consider a price cut,” Sundareshan said.

A sharp depreciation in the value of Indian rupee against the US dollar has wiped away some of the gains from falling international crude oil prices. The three firms were to break even on fuel sales at $67 per barrel crude oil when a dollar was equivalent to 41 Indian rupees.

However, with rupee at the 50 mark, the break even point has now shifted to $57 per barrel.

Retailers sell petrol at a loss of Rs 2.85 a litre, diesel at Rs 7.26, kerosene at Rs 29.19 per litre and domestic LPG at a loss of Rs 333 per cylinder.

IOC, BPCL and HPCL in April-September lost Rs 92,853 crore on fuel sales (audited figures) and are projected to lose Rs 1,47,486 crore in the full fiscal.

Another petroleum ministry official said cutting fuel prices at this stage would widen the revenue loss of state-run firms. “I do not see a trigger, unless political, for a reduction in fuel prices. For a price cut to happen, international oil prices have to sustain at levels lower than the break even point, for at least a month,” he said. — PTI

Back

 





HOME PAGE | Punjab | Haryana | Jammu & Kashmir | Himachal Pradesh | Regional Briefs | Nation | Opinions |
| Business | Sports | World | Letters | Chandigarh | Ludhiana | Delhi |
| Calendar | Weather | Archive | Subscribe | Suggestion | E-mail |