Business Standard

Govt not considering fuel price cuts: Petroleum Secy

Image

Press Trust Of India New Delhi

The government is not considering reducing prices of petrol and diesel, planning to use the profits earned on the two auto fuels to make up for part of the hefty losses on sale of domestic LPG and PDS kerosene.

“At the moment, there is no proposal before us for reducing fuel prices,” Petroleum Secretary R S Pandey told reporters here. State-run Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd (BPCL) and Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd (HPCL) for the first-time in three years started making profits on sale of petrol and diesel this month but they continue to lose Rs 82 crore per day on kerosene and LPG.

 

“In my view, price reduction is not possible when there are such huge losses on cooking fuels,” he said.

The three firms, who started making profit on the sales of petrol from November 1, this week broke-even on diesel sales.

With international crude oil prices sliding further on falling demand as major economies slow down, the three firms are making a net 70 paise per litre profit on sales of diesel, while they earn Rs 9.86 per litre extra on selling petrol above the imported cost.

Based on the average international oil prices in the first fortnight of November, the state-run firms are earning a margin of Rs 16 crore per day on petrol and Rs 5 crore a day on diesel.

However, they continue to lose on kerosene sold through ration shops and domestic LPG. Kerosene is being sold at a loss of Rs 22.40 a litre and LPG at Rs 343.49 per cylinder.

The fall in international oil prices will result in lower revenue loss on fuel sales this fiscal. IOC, BPCL and HPCL will end the 2008-09 fiscal with Rs 122,710 crore revenue loss, Rs 92,853 crore of which has already been accounted for in the first half of the fiscal.

The official said, oil companies wanted to use gains on sales of petrol and diesel to make good part of the loss on kerosene and LPG sales, “reducing petrol and diesel prices now will wipe away this golden opportunity”.

Current profit on petrol and diesel will not be enough to wipe out the net losses the three firms reported in the second quarter ended September 30, 2008.

IOC posted its largest ever net loss of Rs 7,047.13 crore in the July-September quarter. BPCL posted a net loss of Rs 2,625.17 crore in the second quarter on top of Rs 1,066.70 crore in April-June, while HPCL reported Rs 888.12 crore loss in Q1 and another Rs 3,218.92 crore in Q2.

The state-run firms want the government to increase the quantum of oil bonds they get as part compensation for selling fuel below cost.

The government compensates the three refiners for half of their revenue loss on fuel sales by way of oil bonds. Another one-third of the losses are met by companies like ONGC and OIL by way of discounts on crude oil they sell to them.

However, this compensation was proving to be grossly inadequate, the official said, pointing to the net losses posted by the companies in the July-September quarter.

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Nov 21 2008 | 12:00 AM IST

Explore News