hursday, September 15, 2011: State-owned oil firms raised petrol
prices by Rs 3.14 per litre as the rupee touched two-year low against
the US dollar, increasing the cost of importing crude oil. The hike will
be effective from midnight.
Indian Oil Corp (IOC), Bharat Petroleum Corp (BPCL) and Hindsutan
Petroleum Corp (HPCL) now lose Rs 2.61 per litre due to high
international crude oil prices and with rupee touching two-year low
against the US dollar, the losses have increased the cost of importing
crude oil.
“After adding local taxes, the hike needed at retail level comes to over Rs 3 per litre,” the official said.
Petrol price were last hiked by Rs 5 per litre on May 15. It costs Rs 63.70 per litre in Delhi.
“The exact quantum of hike at different cities is being worked out,” the official said.
Petrol price was freed from the government control in June last year
but the retail rates have not moved in line with cost as high inflation
rate forced the oil companies to seek ‘advice’ from parent oil ministry
before revising rates.
IOC, BPCL and HPCL have lost Rs 2,450 crore this fiscal on selling petrol below the cost.
Besides petrol, the three firms are losing Rs 263 crore per day on
selling diesel, domestic LPG and kerosene below cost. Diesel is being
sold at a subsidy of Rs 6.05 a litre, kerosene at Rs 23.25 per litre
while domestic LPG rates are under-priced by Rs 267 per 14.2-kg
cylinder.
Rupee fell to 48 per dollar yesterday for the first time since
September 2009. “Every rupee depreciation, the under-recovery (revenue
loss) increases annually by around Rs 9,000 crore,” he said.
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