Home > Business > Business Headline > Report

Early polls may lead to oil price hike being put off

Pradeep Puri in New Delhi | January 12, 2004 09:18 IST

The possibility of general elections being held in April-May this year has led the government to sound off public sector oil marketing companies about raising the prices of diesel and petrol till after the polls.

This despite the fact that in the past one week, petrol prices have jumped a staggering 17.6 per cent over the previous month's average price and diesel prices have gone up 11.5 per cent.

The international price of petrol, which averaged $38.43 a barrel last month, has touched $45.20 a barrel.

Similarly, diesel, which averaged $35.10 a barrel in December, is now ruling at $39.15 a barrel.

Under normal circumstances, public sector oil marketing companies will have hiked the prices of petrol and diesel by at least Rs 1.50 a litre at the time of next revision on January 15-16.

But now, they might have to absorb the rise in international prices, industry sources said.

The political leadership of the country is learnt to have taken a serious view of the two successive increases in the prices of petrol and diesel in the past month.

The petroleum ministry may ask the upstream oil companies -- Oil and Natural Gas Corporation and Gail India Limited -- to also share the marketing companies' burdens on account of the underrecovery from the sale of the two automobile fuels.

ONGC and Gail are already sharing the burden of these companies on account of underrecoveries from the sale of subsidised domestic liquid petroleum gas and kerosene.


Article Tools
Email this article
Print this article
Write us a letter



Related Stories


ONGC to issue Esops

ONGC, GAIL public issue in Mar

Petro product sales soar 6%



People Who Read This Also Read


Landmark SC ruling on insurance

Underground rail network cleared

India to focus on manufacturing







Powered by










Copyright © 2003 rediff.com India Limited. All Rights Reserved.