Petrol price cut for the second time in 3 days across India
Petrol-Diesel / Petrol price cut for the second time in 3 days across India
Petrol-Diesel - Petrol price cut for the second time in 3 days across India
New Delhi: A day after pause, petrol price was cut by 11 to 15 paise per litre across the country on August 24, according to a price notification by state-run oil companies. Diesel prices also decreased by 14 to 16 paise on the day.The petrol and diesel prices were cut down by 15 paise each in Delhi. The price cut revised the petrol price to Rs 101.49 per litre, while diesel was sold at Rs 88.92 per litre in the national capital on the day.The fuel prices witnessed a similar trend across the country. In Mumbai, the petrol price was decreased to retail the fuel at Rs 107.52, 14 paise down from the previous price of Rs 107. 66. The financial hub, on May 29, became the first metro in the country where petrol was being sold for more than Rs 100 per litre.Diesel price also dropped by 16 paise and sold at Rs 96.48 per litre in Maharashtra’s capital.The petrol and diesel saw price cut of 11 and 15 paise, respectively in Kolkata. With the revision, a litre of petrol was sold at Rs 101.82 and diesel Rs 91.98 in West Bengal’s capital.Chennai retailed a litre of petrol at Rs 99.20 with a price cut of 12 paise. The DMK government in Tamil Nadu has recently announced a tax cut of Rs 3 on petrol per litre. Diesel price decreased by 14 paise to bring down the fuel price to Rs 93.52 per litre in Tamil Nadu’s capital.The price cut follows international oil prices tumbling to their lowest level since May after the US Federal Reserve signalled it was set to start tapering asset purchases within months, hurting commodities and lifting the dollar.The price cut in diesel is the fifth since August 18, when the reduction cycle began.India is near 85 percent dependent on imports to meet its oil needs and so benchmarks local fuel rates to international oil prices. August 18 reduction in diesel rates came after 33 days of status quo in rates as oil companies followed what is known as moderation policy which calls for not passing on extreme volatility in rates to consumers.Incidentally, this status quo coincided with the Parliament session where the opposition parties tried to corner the government on various issues including the hike in fuel prices. Petrol and diesel price was last hiked on July 17.Prior to that, the petrol price was increased by Rs 11.44 a litre between May 4 and July 17. Diesel rates had gone up by Rs 9.14 during this period. The price hike during this period pushed petrol prices above Rs 100-a-litre-mark in more than a half of the country while diesel crossed that level in at least three states.