Petrol and diesel prices may be hiked by 75 paise a litre each if the government accepts an expert panel report, which recommends nationwide fuel standards be upgraded to eliminate cancer-causing particle emissions by 2020.
The Saumitra Chaudhuri Committee on Auto Fuel Vision & Policy 2025 estimated that upgrading refineries to produce Euro-V equivalent petrol and diesel will need an investment of Rs.80,000 crore. This cost can be met by the 75 paise levy on petrol and diesel, it said.
The panel, headed by Mr. Chaudhuri, former Planning Commission member, suggested that fuels should meet Euro-IV emission norms across the country by 2017 and Euro-V standards by 2020.
BS VI emission norms are expected to come into effect from April, 2024.
At present, 26 cities, including Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Ahmedabad and Lucknow, use Euro-IV equivalent fuels, also known as BS-IV fuels, while motorists in the rest of the country use BS-III fuels.
“A Special Fuel Upgradation Cess of 75 paise per litre on all gasoline (petrol) and diesel sold in India be imposed and this cess accrue to the Oil Industry Development Board (OIDB),” the panel said in its report.
The accumulated OIDB cess can be deployed to finance the modernisation and upgrading of refineries to enable them to produce Euro-IV and Euro-V grade fuels.
It estimated that Rs.64,000 crore will be collected over seven years from 2014-15 to 2021-22, assuming a modest growth in sales volumes.
The committee asked the government to deregulate diesel prices “such that the refineries are able to fully recover their costs.’’