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Prime minister may discuss freeing auto fuel prices on Jan 13

Freeing of auto fuel prices would result in petrol prices being raised by Rs3.49 a litre and diesel by Rs2.38 per litre.

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Prime minister may discuss freeing auto fuel prices on Jan 13
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Prime minister Manmohan Singh may deliberate on freeing auto fuel prices when he reviews the financial health of State-run oil firms with finance minister Pranab Mukherjee and oil minister Murli Deora on January 13.

Planning commission deputy chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia and former planning commission member Kirit S Parikh, who heads an expert committee on fuel pricing, may join the deliberations, official sources said.

Officially, the meeting has been called to take stock of the petroleum sector, especially the financial position of PSU oil retailers, they said.

The issue of freeing petrol and diesel prices from the government control may come up for discussion as Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum are projected to lose Rs45,000 crore on selling the two auto fuels and domestic LPG and kerosene at rates below cost during the current fiscal.

Sources said the government had failed to provide the promised oil bonds to make up for the revenue loss on LPG and kerosene, in the absence of which HPCL and BPCL reported losses in the second quarter, while IOC barely scraped through.

Besides the three, private fuel retailers Reliance Industries, Essar Oil and Shell have also sought freeing of petrol and diesel prices to given them a level playing field.

Freeing of auto fuel prices would result in petrol prices being raised by Rs3.49 a litre and diesel by Rs2.38 per litre.

Sources said the January 13 meeting would discuss the current mechanism to share revenue losses incurred by the State-owned oil retailers, with upstream companies like Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) and the government.

Besides reviewing both upstream and downstream sectors, the meeting is likely to hold preliminary discussions on the findings of the Parikh committee, they said.

The group, which is examining the government's pricing policy for petrol, diesel, LPG and kerosene, is likely to give its final recommendations on a sustainable pricing system by the end of January.

Deora had met the prime minister earlier this week seeking the release of Rs20,872 crore of oil bonds towards compensation for the revenue lost by IOC, BPCL and HPCL on selling LPG and kerosene at below cost during the first three quarters of
current fiscal.

The revenue they lose on selling petrol and diesel is made up by upstream firms ONGC and Oil India Ltd.

Sources said this compensation mechanism as well as the level of government subsidies would be deliberated at the meeting next month.

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