NEW
DELHI: The petroleum ministry has sought an increase of Rs 2.50
per litre in petrol and Rs 1.30 per litre in diesel prices in line
with hike in tax rates announced in Budget and asked oil firms to
bear the impact of surge in global oil prices.
The ministry has demanded that the increased incidence of excise
duty on petrol and diesel, the hike in road cess and the marginal
cost of supplying cleaner fuel be passed on to consumers while the
oil companies will bear the rise in cost due to spike in international
prices, officials said.
The hike in excise duty and road cess call for a Rs 2.20 per litre
increase in petrol and Rs 1.06 a litre rise in diesel prices. Additionally,
the cost of supplying cleaner fuel from April 1 came to Rs 0.30
per litre for petrol and Rs 0.24 a litre for diesel.
The oil companies will have to take on themselves the Rs 0.37 per
litre increase necessiated in petrol prices due to the surge in
international oil prices and Rs 2.43 a litre on diesel.
Separately, the ministry has sought Rs 20 per cylinder hike in
LPG and Rs 3 per litre increase in kerosene prices to cut the Rs
81.93 per cylinder loss on LPG and Rs 10.31 a litre loss on kerosene
sale.
Speaking to reporters petroleum secretary SC Tripathi said, "international
oil prices have lowered when compared to the last fortnight of April
and first fortnight of May. Oil companies are still loosing on fuel
sale. The under-recoveries may be lower than April-May but over
a full year, they are unsustainable."
Petrol and diesel prices have remained unchanged since November
2004 despite a USD 10 a barrel increase in crude oil prices. Kerosene
prices have remained unchanged for over three years now while LPG
prices were last revised in mid-2004.
Tripathi said his ministry had presented facts to the Prime Minister’s
office and "it was now for the government to take a decision."
He did not say when the Cabinet is likely to discuss fuel price
revision.
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