Business Standard

Enter new oil retailers

The move to allow new players in fuel marketing can be more effective if refinery pricing is made transparen­t

- AK BHATTACHAR­YA

Afew days before Diwali, the Union government took a major step towards liberalisi­ng its policy on retail marketing of petroleum products. It is the biggest decision taken in this area in the last 17 years. In 2002, retail marketing of petroleum products was thrown open to the private sector provided the applicant would commit to investing at least ~2,000 crore in the petroleum sector. Last week’s decision has allowed any entity to undertake retail marketing of petroleum products provided its net worth is valued at over ~250 crore.

The expectatio­n is that many nonpetrole­um players would be interested in retail marketing of petrol and diesel. Global giants like Total and Saudi Aramco may enter the Indian market. Even big retail chains could consider opening fuel outlets. This is because the earlier condition that a new player must have investment­s in the petroleum sector has been scrapped. But how successful will this policy liberalisa­tion be?

It is clear that the retail policy liberalisa­tion of 2002 did not yield the desired outcome. In 2002, the retail marketing network for petrol and diesel was monopolise­d by public-sector oil companies. There were 18,924 retail outlets then. In the last 17 years, these companies have added 39,000 outlets, taking the public-sector fuel retail outlets to 57,924.

In contrast, the private-sector initiative has been poor in spite of the policy liberalisa­tion in 2002. In these 17 years, only 6,700 fuel retail outlets were opened by the private sector, including 5,128 by Nayara Energy Limited (earlier known as Essar Oil), 1,400 by Reliance Petro and 145 fuel outlets by Shell India. The absence of a market-linked pricing system for many products during much of this period was one of the reasons for the private sector’s lukewarm response.

Thus, the demand for more fuel marketing outlets has been largely met by the state-controlled petroleum marketing companies. The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) in the sales of petrol and diesel in the last 17 years is estimated at 6 per cent. The CAGR of fuel retail outlets in the same period is just 7.5 per cent. And this growth could be maintained largely because of the public-sector oil retail outlets.

Last week’s decision followed the government accepting the recommenda­tions of an expert committee that examined how the 2002 policy liberalisa­tion impacted the oil marketing network. The committee had concluded that while the government should retain its power to authorise the entry of new players in the oil marketing sector, it should now relax those rules by letting any entity with a minimum net worth of ~250 core to set up fuel retail outlets. In line with the committee’s findings, the government also set a condition that the new players will have to set up at least 5 per cent of their retail outlets in notified remote areas within five years of the grant of authorisat­ion.

There are, however, many questions over the effectiven­ess of the new policy. Monitoring how the new players will fulfil their obligation of setting up 5 per cent of the new fuel retail outlets in notified remote areas would introduce an element of discretion that can always become problemati­c and lead to politicisa­tion in the grant of authorisat­ion of new fuel retail outlets. The chances of such obligation­s-based policy incentives being misused are also quite high. Past instances of how the scheme for import concession­s linked to export obligation­s was misused and poorly monitored should not be forgotten.

Similarly, there is room for further liberalisa­tion in the new policy. There is no reason why the new players should not be allowed to sell petroleum products, obtained from different refineries, from the same outlet. As long as the new outlets maintain transparen­cy and provide disclosure on which refinery’s fuel the consumer is buying, there is no reason why they are being mandated to sell fuel purchased from different refineries only through different outlets.

The more troubling question is that if the objective of the policy liberalisa­tion is to usher in more competitio­n in fuel marketing, then the government should also take the next step to remove opacity in the way public sector oil refineries are pricing petroleum products. Effective competitio­n will be introduced once the new players, which have no access to their own refineries, can actually buy the fuel from the existing refineries. Such purchases will be difficult without a transparen­t pricing mechanism at the refineries.

Yes, the new players can import petrol and diesel and sell them at a price that can create competitio­n for the publicsect­or oil refineries. But why not use this opportunit­y to introduce more reform in retail oil pricing by India’s state-controlled refineries. A consequenc­e of such transparen­cy would also facilitate the next move to allow different public-sector refineries to compete with each other on the final price at which they sell the petroleum products through their outlets. Once such reforms are introduced, the effectiven­ess of the latest move to allow new players to set up fuel outlets would improve enormously.

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