Fuel consumption rose 10.9 per cent to 183.5 million tonne in the financial year ended March 31, from 165.5 MT in the previous year, according to latest data released by the Oil Ministry.
Diesel sales soared 7.5 per cent to 74.6 MT. Petrol consumption was up 14.5 per cent to 21.8 MT, its highest level in two decades as automobile sales grew at their fastest pace in five years on narrowing price differential between petrol and diesel.
A litre of petrol in Delhi costs Rs 61.87 in Delhi while diesel is priced at Rs 49.31 per lire. The difference previously used to be about Rs 20 per litre.
Also, petrol is taxed more than diesel.
Also Read
Fuel sales jumped 16.5 per cent in March on back of robust petrol and diesel sales and oil companies stocking dealers with supplies to meet year-end targets.
Diesel demand was up 15 per cent at 6.78 MT, while petrol sales soared 21 per cent to 2.04 MT.
Sharma said fuel consumption is likely to remain robust in 2016-17 with petrol demand projected to rise by about 11 per cent and diesel by close to 4 per cent.
Also contributing to the rise in fuel sales is expanding economy and manufacturing as also the agriculture sector demand for diesel.
Kerosene demand fell to 6.82 MT from in 2015-16 from 7.02 MT in the previous year as government moved to replace use of heavily subsidised kerosene with LPG.