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India may
hike fuel price
NEW DELHI—India is considering raising fuel prices or cutting duties in
a bid to ease the pain of state oil firms hit by the surge in global
crude prices, and hopes to agree a package next week, the oil minister
said on Friday.
Murli Deora met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and ruling Congress party
chief Sonia Gandhi to discuss relief measures for the firms, which are
forced to sell fuel at artificially low rates to protect the poor and
fight inflation. “We hope to find a solution next week,” Deora told
reporters.
“There were several alternatives which were discussed — an increase in
prices, reducing import duties on crude and reducing (excise) duties on
products.”
“Government is considering all these,” he said. But analysts say
important state elections due in December, opposition from communist
allies to a nuclear deal with the U.S., and the implications for
inflation will make officials think twice before raising prices.
The government is yet to raise state-administered retail fuel prices
this year even though global oil prices topped $96 a barrel this week.
Oil was holding above $94 on Friday as concerns over tight fuel supplies
in the run up to winter returned to the fore.
India’s government issues oil bonds to oil firms to partially offset
their losses from selling fuel below market rates. But with crude prices
rising, countries such as India that sell gasoline, diesel and other
consumer fuels at below costs are feeling the heat. Deora met Singh and
Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram on Thursday and said there
appeared to be few options to consider apart from raising prices or
cutting duties.—Agencies
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