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Decision on fuel prices deferred, CCPA meet postponed
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SME Times News Bureau | 12 Sep, 2012
A decision on a hike in fuel prices was deferred Tuesday as a meeting
of the Cabinet Committee on Political Affairs (CCPA), scheduled for the
evening, was postponed.
Sources said the meeting was called off
as some members of the ruling alliance were not in favour of such a
decision ahead of state elections later this year.
Earlier in the
day, Petroleum Minister Jaipal Reddy said an increase in diesel,
cooking gas and kerosene prices is "unavoidable" to reduce
under-recoveries of oil marketing companies.
"As I have said
before, painful and difficult decisions on price of oil products will
have to be taken. Increase in price is unavoidable," Reddy told
reporters on the sidelines of an event here.
"To what extent can the consumers take it, is another matter."
Reddy
said he had circulated an updated note to the CCPA, headed by Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh, detailing the financial stress created by the
rise in crude prices and fall in the value of rupee against the US
dollar.
State-run oil marketing companies are losing Rs.550
crore per day on under-recoveries as a result of higher crude prices in
the global markets.
Their losses on sales are at the rate of
Rs.17 per litre on diesel, Rs.32.70 per litre on kerosene and Rs.347 per
cylinder on cooking gas.
Reports, meanwhile, said prices of oil
jumped near the highest level in a week amid speculation that countries
like the US and China will announce economic stimulus measures to pep up
growth.
Indian Oil chairman R.S. Butola said oil marketing companies were currently losing nearly Rs.6 per litre on petrol sales.
"There
is a need to raise petrol prices. We are in consultations with our
colleagues at other oil marketing companies and stakeholders," Butola
said.
Though petrol prices are freed from administrative control
since June 2010, the OMCs consult the government before taking any
decision on the price front.
The finance ministry also supports
the petroleum ministry's stand on cutting the subsidies on petroleum
products as the move would lower the government's subsidy burden and
improve the country's fiscal outlook.
With the rising global
prices of crude oil and hardening of other commodities, it is feared
that the fiscal deficit could breach the budget estimate of 5.1 per cent
of gross domestic product for the current fiscal.
At the end of the day, Reddy proved himself prescient.
"If
it (price increase) is taken up today (Tuesday), which is not very
likely, some decisions may be taken... if it is not taken up today,
decision will be postponed," he had said.
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| Customs Exchange Rates |
| Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
₹94.2
|
₹92.5 |
UK Pound
|
₹128.85
|
₹124.8 |
Euro
|
₹112.2
|
₹108.45 |
| Japanese
Yen |
₹59.85 |
₹58 |
| As on 06 May, 2026 |
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