Petrol and diesel prices on Tuesday saw the biggest hike since July 5 Budget as India voiced concern over spike in global oil prices following attacks on Saudi Arabian crude oil facilities. Petrol price was increased by 14 paisa per litre to Rs 72.17 and diesel by 15 paisa to Rs 65.58 per litre in the national capital, according to price information available from state-owned oil firms.
This increase is the biggest single-day hike since the July 5 maiden Budget of Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman that raised rates by almost Rs 2.50 a litre due to an increase in excise duty on fuel. The increase in retail prices on Tuesday followed nearly 20 per cent surge in international oil prices in intraday trading — the biggest jump in almost 30 years — in response to attacks halving Saudi Arabia’s output, before closing nearly 15 per cent higher at four-month highs.
On Tuesday, international oil prices slid, although the market remains on tenterhooks over the threat of a military response to the attacks. Brent crude was down 36 cents, or 0.50 per cent, at USD 68.66 a barrel. Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said India, the world’s third-largest oil consumer, is keeping a close watch on the developing situation.
“Certainly when there is a spike in prices, it creates anxiety,” he told reporters here. “The events since Saturday (when the Saudi oil facilities were attacked) are a matter of concerns to us.” He, however, said that oil supplies from Saudi Arabia, India’s second-biggest source, have not been disrupted.
“We have uplifted more than half of the contracted quantity for September. We uplifted oil (from Saudi Arabia) yesterday (September 16) and even today (September 17),” he said.
Indian oil companies, as well as the government, are in touch with Saudi oil company Aramco and authorities in the Kingdom, he said. “India is watching the situation closely.”
India imports 83 per cent of its oil needs. Saudi Arabia is its second-biggest supplier after Iraq. It sold 40.33 million tonnes of crude oil to India in 2018-19 fiscal, when the country had imported 207.3 million tonnes of oil.
Pradhan said reports suggest that the massive drone strike on the world’s largest crude-processing facility operated by Saudi Arabia’s Aramco has led to a loss of 5 million barrels per day of supplies from Saudi Arabia.
There are expectations that the largest-ever disruption of crude production in Saudi Arabia may keep oil prices elevated in the near term. Abqaiq and Khurais are main processing centres for Saudi Arabia’s Arab Extra Light and Arab Light crude oil.
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