Consumers will not have to worry about paying more for petrol and diesel for another couple of months at least, even as oil-marketing companies continue to be worried. |
The Ministry Of Petroleum and Natural Gas has ruled out a hike in the prices of petrol and diesel in the near future even as the price of the Indian basket of crude oil continues to remain above $65 a barrel. |
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"Prices will not be hiked even if the global crude oil crosses $70 a barrel," a senior petroleum ministry official said. |
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"A hike in prices of auto fuels is not possible because we have to calculate the average under-recoveries over the next couple of months, based on which auto fuel prices will be looked at," the official said. |
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The price of the basket of crude oil that Indian refiners buy has risen almost 10.79 per cent to $66.12 a barrel over the last one month. |
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The high prices "� the average price in March was $60.26 a barrel compared with $56.53 in February "� has resulted in the state-owned oil marketing companies losing close to Rs 120 crore a day from retail sales. |
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This has resulted in the industry calling for a hike in retail prices of petrol and diesel. |
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However, the government is not yet prepared to raise prices of automobile fuels. Petroleum Minister Murli Deora recently told Business Standard that the government did not yet have a price benchmark above which prices of auto fuels will be hiked. |
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An oil ministry official maintained there will be no hike in prices of petrol and diesel for atleast a couple of months. |
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With the closing of the financial year, the "accounts" of all losses that oil marketing companies incurred by selling the four petroleum products "� petrol, diesel, LPG and kerosene "� below market prices are closed as well. Leftover oil bonds from the previous year are also not rolled over to the next financial year. |
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In the last financial year the government had cleared oil bonds worth Rs 28,300 crore to the oil marketing companies. Of these around Rs 24,000 crore worth of bonds were disbursed. |
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The government had hiked prices of petrol and diesel by Rs 4 a litre and Rs 2 a litre in June last year. It then cut prices twice, first for diesel by Rs 2 and then for petrol by Re 1 in November and February respectively. |
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