- NEW DELHI — Public sector oil companies on Thursday slashed the price of
commercial LPG by Rs 14.50 per 19-kg cylinder while the price of jet fuel for
airlines was cut by 4.4 per cent.
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- The price of Aviation Turbine Fuel (ATF) was reduced by
around Rs 3,954.38 per kilolitre (1,000 litres) to Rs 85,486.80 per kl, which
will come as a shot in the arm for commercial airlines such as Air India and
IndiGo as fuel accounts for around 30 per cent of their operational costs.
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- The price cut follows a steep 6.15 per cent (Rs 5,870.54
per kl) reduction effected on April 1. These two reductions have effectively
offset the price increases that occurred earlier this year.
- The reduction in fuel prices comes against the backdrop
of crude oil prices having fallen to a four-year low in the global market with
the benchmark Brent crude hovering at around to $63 a barrel, the lowest since
April 2021.
Also read: Daily UPI transactions surge to 596 million in April, value touches INR 24 lakh crore
- Oil prices have declined as demand has declined amid the
global slowdown. Oil prices have slumped as demand has declined amid the global
slowdown. Saudi Arabia, one of the world's biggest oil producers, has also
indicated that it won’t shore up oil prices with any more supply cuts as it is
ready to face a prolonged period of low prices. This is expected to come in the
way of the OPEC oil cartel from influencing prices.
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- The decline in oil prices augurs well for the Indian
economy as the country imports around 85 per cent of its crude requirement, and
any decline in oil prices leads to a reduction in the country’s import bill.
This, in turn leads to a lowering of the current account deficit (CAD) and
strengthening of the rupee.
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- India is currently the third-largest importer of oil.
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- Apart from strengthening the external balance, a decline
in oil prices also leads to lower prices of petrol, diesel and jet fuel in the
domestic market, which eases inflation in the country.
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- To raise more resources, the government had last month
increased the excise duty on petrol and diesel, which is being borne by the
public sector oil companies - Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum, and Hindustan Petroleum.
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- Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri
stated that the government-owned oil marketing companies will absorb the
increase in excise duty on petrol and diesel, as their input costs have come
down due to the decline in crude oil prices in the global market.
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