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No change in oil contingency plan: Naik
March 24, 2003 17:53 IST
Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Ram Naik said on Monday that there was no change in government's contingency plan in the wake of the US-led war on Iraq.
"As of now, we see no reason to change our contingency plan as the circumstances have not changed much", Naik told newspersons after inaugurating Asia's first two-day Gas Buyers' Summit in Mumbai.
The minister had last week said the government has since September chalked out plans for increasing the stock of oil products and has enough petrol, diesel, ATF, LPG and other products to last two months.
Referring to the sanctity of the agreement of Oil and Natural Gas Corporation for a block near Basra in case the regime changes in Iraq, he said, "generally in international agreements, the commitments made by the previous regime are maintained."
On the import bill for crude in 2002-03, he said it would be higher than Rs 78,000 crore (Rs 780 billion) incurred in previous fiscal as international prices have gone up compared to those prevailing in FY-02.
The price was pegged at $19-20 per barrel in March 2002, which now has gone up to over $32 per barrel.
During the 1991 Iraq conflict, India had to face several problems, one of which was payment of the import bill but this time the country has the highest foreign exchange reserves, he said.
Whether petrol and diesel would cost more, he said it would depend upon the average price of crude, which was priced at lower rate of $24 per barrel on Friday last and if the same trend continued, the oil companies would take this into account during fortnightly review of prices.
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