The Sri Lankan subsidiary of Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) is incurring a loss of nearly $6 million a month due to the steep rise in global crude oil prices and has sought an increase in petroleum prices. |
The losses of the Lanka IOC (LIOC), as a result of the crude oil prices hovering around the $100-a-barrel mark, are likely to rise further due to the Sri Lankan government's reluctance to raise petroleum prices before the end of this year. |
Petroleum Minister AHM Fowzie told reporters on Thursday that a price rise was not likely before the year-end. |
Both Fowzie and Asantha de Mel, chairman of Ceylon Petroleum Corporation, are hopeful that the oil prices would decline in the coming fortnight. |
According to Lanka IOC Managing Director K Ramakrishnan, the company is incurring a loss of Rs 540 million (Sri lankan rupees) a month on diesel imports and another Rs 120 million on petrol imports. This works out to $5.97 million. |
Ramakrishnan observed that although the trend in the past had been for the November to January period to see a slide in oil prices, this has been proven wrong, given the current situation in the global market. |
Lanka LIOC, is a subsidiary of Indian Oil Corp in Sri Lanka, which is the only public sector oil firm other than the state-owned Ceylon Petroleum Corporation that operates retail petrol stations in the island country. |
It has been incorporated to carry out retail marketing of petroleum products, bulk supply to industrial consumers, building and operating storage facilities at the Trincomalee Tank farm, among other things. |