The more than 70% fall in global crude oil prices since July has brought some cheer to the state-run Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) as it is likely to be exempted from subsidising domestic LPG and kerosene because the drop has eroded the gains of the company.
Upstream companies ONGC, Oil India Ltd and GAIL India Ltd give discounts on the crude oil and petroleum products they sell to retailers, sharing at least 33% of the revenue loss on fuel sales to final consumers.
However, with crude oil plummeting from $47 a barrel in July to under $40 per barrel currently, ONGC has seen its fortunes decline as it sells the crude oil it produces at rates linked to internationally traded oil prices.
?The petroleum ministry sent a letter on November 18 informing ONGC and others that they will not have to give any discounts to Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum from the third week of November,? a government official said on the sidelines of a function to mark the signing up of the production sharing contracts (PSCs) for the exploration blocks awarded under the seventh bid round of New Exploration Licensing Policy (NELP) here today.
ONGC, which shelled out Rs 22,474 crore in the April-September period to subsidise fuel, had in October to mid-November given out discounts of another Rs 3,693 crore.
It, together with OIL and GAIL, gave subsidies of Rs 4,282 crore in the period (October to mid-November), taking the total payout this fiscal to over Rs 30,000 crore.
When contacted, petroleum secretary RS Pandey said upstream companies had petitioned the ministry against subsidy payout as their revenues had dipped steeply due to fall in international oil prices. ONGC has seen its gross realisation on crude oil sales fall to one-third to $40-42 a barrel this quarter.
?Naturally the companies cannot take the Rs 45,000 crore subsidy burden envisaged in June. The matter is under consideration,? Pandey, who was also present at the function said.
Meanwhile, in a related development, government sources on Monday indicated that petrol, diesel and domestic LPG prices might be further reduced just before the general elections are announced in February.
?To my mind, the government will wait till February before making another round of price cuts,? a senior petroleum ministry official said.
Earlier this month, the government reduced petrol price by Rs 5 a litre and diesel by Rs 2 per litre as international crude oil prices dipped from an all-time high of $147 a barrel in July to under $45 a barrel.