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Wednesday, 23 March 2022

Petrol, diesel prices today: Fuel rates remain steady on 24 March, check here to know rates in your city

Prices of petrol and diesel remained unchanged on Thursday, 24 March after a continuous hike for two consecutive days.

In Delhi, petrol costs Rs 97.01 a litre while the rate of diesel was Rs 88.27 per litre.

In Mumbai, petrol can be bought at Rs 111.67 per litre and diesel costs Rs 95.85 a litre.

In Chennai, a litre of petrol is priced at Rs 102.91. On Thursday, the price of a litre of diesel was Rs 92.95 per litre.

Also Read: Click here for Petrol Price

Petrol in Kolkata costs Rs 106.34 while diesel costs Rs 91.42 a litre.

While petrol can be bought at Rs 108.98 per litre in Bhopal, diesel costs Rs 92.52 per litre.

On the other hand, a 14.2-kg non-subsidised LPG cylinder will now cost Rs 949.50 in the national capital.

While LPG rates were last revised on 6 October, petrol and diesel prices had been on a freeze since 4 November ahead of the assembly elections in states like Uttar Pradesh and Punjab.

Prices have been on a freeze since then despite the cost of raw material spiralling. International oil prices were around $81-82 a barrel in early November as against $114 now.

Sources said a 5 KG LPG cylinder will now cost Rs 349 while the 10 kg composite bottle will come for Rs 669. The 19-kg commercial cylinder now costs Rs 2003.50.

Last Sunday, the price of diesel sold to bulk users has been hiked by about Rs 25 per litre in line with a near 40 per cent rise in international oil prices, but retail rates at petrol pumps remain unchanged, sources said.

Petrol pump sales have jumped by a fifth this month after bulk users like bus fleet operators and malls queued up at petrol bunks to buy fuel rather than the usual practice of ordering directly from oil companies, widening the losses of retailers.

Worst hit are private retailers like Nayara Energy, Jio-bp and Shell, who have so far refused to curtail any volume despite a surge in sales. But now closure of pumps is a more viable solution than continuing to sell more fuel at rates that have been on freeze for a record 136 days, three sources with direct knowledge of the development said.

In 2008, Reliance Industries had shut all of its 1,432 petrol pumps in the country after sales dropped to almost nil as it could not match the subsidized price offered by the public sector competition.

A similar scenario may unfold again as retailers' losses widen from bulk users being diverted to petrol pumps, they said.

Price of diesel sold to bulk users has been hiked to Rs 122.05 per litre in Mumbai. This compares to Rs 94.14 a litre price of the same fuel sold at petrol pumps.

In Delhi, diesel costs Rs 86.67 a litre at the petrol pump, but for bulk or industrial users it is priced at about Rs 115.

PSU oil companies have not raised retail prices of petrol and diesel since November 4, 2021 despite a surge in global oil and fuel prices, a move seen as aiding the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in crucial state assembly elections.

Prices were supposed to start aligning with cost after counting of votes on 10 March, but the ensuing start of the second half of the Budget Session meant that the price increases didn't happen.

Private fuel retailers like Nayara Energy, Jio-bp and Shell were forced to hold petrol and diesel prices as they would have lost customers, if rates at their petrol pumps were higher than those of Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd (BPCL) and Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd (HPCL).

But now, the PSU retailers have hiked rates for bulk users such as state bus fleets and malls and airports which use diesel for generating back up electricity, sources said.

There is hardly any bulk or industrial user of petrol, diesel is widely used in industries.

The wide difference of about Rs 25 per litre between the bulk user rate and petrol pump price has prompted bulk users to refuel at petrol pumps rather than book tankers directly from oil companies, they said.

This has led to widening losses of oil companies, who were already bleeding from selling petrol and diesel at way below the cost.

While Nayara Energy did not reply to an email sent for comments, Jio-bp -- the fuel retail joint venture of Reliance and UK's bp -- said "there is a massive surge of demand at fuel stations (retail outlets) due to increased delta of Rs 25 per cent between retail and industrial price of diesel, leading to heavy diversion of bulk diesel (direct customers) to retail outlets."

"There is also a very heavy lifting of fuel by dealers and both B2B & B2C customers, who have advanced their purchases, to top up their tanks and capacities in anticipation of price increase which is overdue. Due to this immediate surge there have been record sales in March 2022, which is putting strain on the entire logistics and supply infrastructure," Jio-bp spokesperson said.

This is further exacerbated by shortage of Tank Trucks and rakes due to sudden surge in demand along with limited availability of TT crew during the festive period across the industry, the spokesperson added.

While private retailers have not disclosed sales, PSU retailers have sold 3.53 million tonnes of diesel from 1 to 15 March, up 32.8 per cent from a month earlier. The sales were 23.7 per cent higher year-on-year and 17.3 per cent higher than sales in March 1-15, 2019.

Oil Minister Hardeep Singh Puri last week said that fuel sales had jumped 20 per cent due to hoarding in anticipation of price increase, but sources insisted the sales also increased because of bulk users queuing at petrol pumps.

A Jio-bp spokesperson said in spite of challenges, Reliance is fully committed to meet the demand of its retail customers.

While Nayara has 6,510 petrol pumps in the country, Jio-bp has 1,454. PSUs control 90 per cent of the 81,699 petrol pumps in the country.

In 2008, PSU retailers were paid government subsidies for selling petrol and diesel at below cost but private retailers were kept out of such a scheme. This time around, PSU retailers have been asked to square up their losses from inventory gains and higher refining margins they are earning now. But private retailers do not have refineries to cover up for retail losses.

In Delhi, fuel is relatively cheaper than the rest of the metros because the state government had earlier decided to reduce the Value-Added Tax (VAT) on petrol, bringing down the price of the fuel in the city by about Rs 8 per litre.

Earlier, the petrol price in Delhi was higher as compared to the NCR cities in Uttar Pradesh and Haryana, where the state governments had announced a VAT cut following the Centre reducing the excise duty on fuel prices.

Following are the prices of diesel and petrol in a few metros and Tier-II cities in the country:

1. Mumbai

Petrol - Rs 111.67 per litre
Diesel - Rs 95.85 per litre

2. Delhi

Petrol - Rs 97.01 per litre
Diesel - Rs 88.27 per litre

3. Chennai

Petrol - Rs 102.91 per litre
Diesel - Rs 92.95 per litre

4. Kolkata

Petrol - Rs 106.34 per litre
Diesel - Rs 91.42 per litre

5. Bhopal

Petrol - Rs 108.98 per litre
Diesel - Rs 92.52 per litre

6. Hyderabad

Petrol - Rs 110.01 per litre
Diesel - Rs 96.37 per litre

7. Bangaluru

Petrol - Rs 102.26 per litre
Diesel - Rs 86.58 per litre

8. Guwahati

Petrol - Rs 96.34 per litre
Diesel - Rs 82.67 per litre

9. Lucknow

Petrol - Rs 96.87 per litre
Diesel - Rs 88.42 per litre

10. Gandhinagar

Petrol - Rs 96.94 per litre
Diesel - Rs 91.00 per litre

11. Thiruvananthapuram

Petrol - Rs 108.11 per litre
Diesel - Rs 95.17 per litre

Disclosure: Network18, the parent company of Firstpost.com, is controlled by Independent Media Trust, of which Reliance Industries is the sole beneficiary.

With inputs from PTI

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