Govt to consider diesel price de-regulation

January 04, 2013 05:35 pm | Updated June 12, 2016 09:38 pm IST - New Delhi

FOR DAILY: COIMBATORE 25/06/2011: 
SPIRALLING: Operators of heavy vehicles says the rise in the price of diesel will have a cascading effect and the common man will, ultimately, bear the brunt of the rise.
Photo:M. Periasamy (Digital)

FOR DAILY: COIMBATORE 25/06/2011: SPIRALLING: Operators of heavy vehicles says the rise in the price of diesel will have a cascading effect and the common man will, ultimately, bear the brunt of the rise. Photo:M. Periasamy (Digital)

Diesel, kerosene and cooking gas LPG prices may be hiked soon as the government considers Vijay Kelkar Committee recommendations on cutting fiscal deficit.

The Kelkar Committee, which was appointed by Finance Ministry to suggest a roadmap for fiscal consolidation, has suggested immediate hike in fuel prices and complete deregulation of diesel prices by start of 2014-15 fiscal. It also suggested raising kerosene and LPG rates.

“It is still at proposal stage. The (Petroleum) Ministry is only processing that report and we are yet to take a decision,” Oil Minister M Veerappa Moily told reporters here, when asked about deregulation of diesel prices.

The panel had in September recommended “immediate increase in Petroleum prices. This should be continued in the next year in such a way that the prices of diesel are fully deregulated by the start of 2014-15. The prices of kerosene and LPG also should be revised regularly to keep the subsidy levels at affordable levels.”

Price of diesel, which currently costs Rs 47.15 per litre in Delhi, was last revised on September 14 when it was hiked by a steep Rs 5.63 per litre. Kerosene rates have not changed since June 2011 and it currently costs Rs 14.79 per litre in Delhi.

State-owned oil companies currently sell diesel at a loss of Rs 10.16 per litre, kerosene at Rs 32.17 a litre and LPG at Rs 490.50 per 14.2-kg cylinder.

Mr. Moily said the government was also considering raising the cap on supply of subsidised cooking gas (LPG) cylinders to 9 per household in a year from current limit of six.

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