Domestic LPG price hiked by Rs 60 per cylinder; now costs Rs 913
This is the second increase in rate in 11 months. The price was last hiked by Rs 50 in April last year.
PTI
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LPG markets have also tightened as shipments from key Gulf exporters face logistical disruptions (PTI)
New Delhi, 7 Mar
Domestic cooking gas LPG price on Saturday was hiked by a
steep Rs 60 per cylinder, the second increase in rate in less than a year, as
oil companies pass on a part of the spike in global energy rates that followed
the West Asia crisis.
Non-subsidised LPG - the one that common households use in
kitchens - will now cost Rs 913 per 14.2-kg cylinder in Delhi as against Rs 853
previously, according to the Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) website.
Ujjwala Yojana beneficiaries - the over 10 crore poor who
have got free LPG connection since 2016 - will also have to bear the same
amount of price increase. They will now pay Rs 613 per 14.2 kg cylinder after
accounting for a subsidy of Rs 300 per bottle they get for up to 12 refills in
a year.
The price increase, the website showed, is effective from 7
March.
This is the second increase in rate in 11 months. The price
was last hiked by Rs 50 in April last year.
Alongside, the price of commercial LPG - the one used by
establishments such as hotels and restaurants - was increased by Rs 114.5 per
19-kg cylinder. It now costs Rs 1,883 in Delhi. This increase comes on top of
Rs 28 per 19-kg cylinder raise effected on 1 March.
Commercial LPG rate has risen by Rs 302.50 this year.
Industry officials said the increase follows a steep rise in
global energy prices since the US and Israel attack on Iran last weekend
triggered a wider military conflict in the oil and gas-rich Middle East.
The conflict has led to a near halt in tanker movement
through the Strait of Hormuz -the narrow but critical sea lane between Iran and
Oman used by Middle Eastern producers to export oil and gas to global markets.
The disruption has sharply curtailed energy shipments from the region,
triggering a spike in global oil and gas prices.
Since the conflict broke out on 28 February, US crude soared
35.63 per cent for the biggest weekly gain in the history of the futures
contract dating back to 1983. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) futures closed at
USD 90.90 per barrel. Brent jumped about 28 per cent for its biggest weekly
gain since April 2020, to settle at USD 92.69 per barrel.
Asian spot prices for liquefied natural gas (LNG) have also
jumped to around USD 25.40 per million British thermal units (MMBtu) - a
three-year high and more than double of last week's levels of around USD 10 per
mmBtu amid fears of supply disruptions and halted exports from Qatar.
LPG markets have also tightened as shipments from key Gulf
exporters face logistical disruptions, pushing international propane and butane
benchmarks higher and raising concerns over supply availability for major
importers such as India.
Despite Saturday's price increase, cooking gas in India is
priced at the lowest when compared with neighbouring countries, industry
officials said.
In Mumbai, non-subsidised LPG now costs Rs 912.50, Rs 939 in
Kolkata and Rs 928.50 in Chennai, according to the IOC website.
Rates differ from state to state depending on the incidence
of local sales tax or VAT.
The Strait of Hormuz is also a critical conduit for India's
energy imports, with roughly half of the crude oil the country buys from
overseas transiting through the narrow waterway. In addition, nearly 40 per
cent of India's natural gas imports, largely in the form of LNG from Gulf
suppliers like Qatar and the UAE, also pass through the strait.
For LPG, the strait is more important. India consumed 31.3
million tonne of LPG in 2024-25, of which only 12.8 million tonne were produced
domestically, with the remainder imported. Of the imported quantity, 85-90 per
cent come from countries like Saudi Arabia that rely on the Strait of Hormuz
for transit.
The Strait has been effectively blocked following a week-old
escalation in the region, after US and Israeli strikes on Iran prompted Tehran
to retaliate against US bases in neighbouring countries.
To augment domestic supplies, the government on Friday
invoked sparingly used emergency powers to direct oil refineries to ramp up LPG
production.
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