Reiterating New Delhi's decade-old demand, Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said OPEC should work towards "responsible price", which would allow major consuming countries to provide energy to the common people.
Higher prices will force them to go for alternate forms of energy which would be slowing down the demand of crude oil, he said in his address at the 2nd high-level meeting of the OPEC-India Energy Dialogue here.
"During my last visit to Vienna for the 6th OPEC International Seminar in 2015, I had raised the issue of 'Asian Dividend not Asian Premium'.
Pradhan's predecessors, particularly Mani Shankar Aiyar, had in past vociferously raised the issue of OPEC members charging the so-called premium from Asian buyers but the cartel has refused to act on the issue.
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OPEC, Pradhan said, should treat Asian markets as primary markets. "It's strategy of incentivising western markets in the past did not result in retaining those markets."
Stating that OPEC member countries are in the business of selling oil and not subsidising it, he said, "don't subsidise others at our expense."
The oil cartel, which accounts for over 40 per cent of world's oil supplies, should work towards 'responsible price', he said, adding dialogue between producers and consumers help better understand each other's prescpectives.
Pradhan said India is growing consistently at over 7 per cent and the growth rate in the energy sector is 7-8 per cent, which is double the rate of many developed markets.
With increasing demand and consumption, India is increasing imports and also its refining capacity.
"Today, our annual refining capacity is 235 million tonnes of which 194 million tonnes of products are consumed domestically, while the rest is exported. At the same time our energy consumption is expected to double in the next 15 years.
Also, Indian firms are investing about USD 80 billion in petrochemicals in next 3-5 years.