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India’s oil demand growth weakest since 2013

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MUMBAI: India’s oil consumptio­n in 2017 expanded at the slowest pace in four years as a surprise ban on high-value currency notes and a new national sales tax weakened the economy.

The nation’s consumptio­n of petroleum products rose 2% to about 200 million tonnes, the Oil Ministry’s Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell said yesterday.

That’s the slowest since 2013, when demand grew 1.7% while global oil prices averaged about US$109 a barrel, almost double last year’s level.

“The cash ban had a bigger impact on oil demand in the first half, while the goods and services tax impacted the second half,” Nevyn Nah, an oil products analyst at Energy Aspects, said by phone from Singapore, adding that good rainfall during the monsoon season also lowered diesel demand.

Growth slowed down in the world’s second-most populous nation after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s unpreceden­ted cash ban in 2016 and the chaotic rollout of a goods and services tax last year.

India forecast its economy will expand 6.5% in the year through March, the slowest pace since Modi came to power in 2014.

India’s slowdown last year followed the 11% surge in 2016, the biggest gain on record, spurred by rising income levels that propelled greater use motorbikes.

The cash ban and the new tax hit truckers the hardest, affecting demand for diesel as they are the largest consumers of the fuel in India. Diesel accounts for almost 40% of the country’s oil products use.

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency, which expects the country to be the fastest-growing oil consumer through 2040, cut its 2017 demand forecast for India at least three times, following sharp fluctuatio­ns in monthly consumptio­n.

The agency estimated India’s oil demand growth at 135,000 barrels a day in 2017 and 275,000 barrels a day in 2018. of cars, trucks and

India’s total oil products consumptio­n grew 7.5% in December, the most in three months. The country consumed about 17 million tonnes of oil products last month, up from about 16 million tonnes a year earlier.

“The worst is over,” Nah said. “As the government embarks on progrowth policy to revive the economy and consolidat­e electoral support before the 2019 general election, Indian oil demand growth is likely to pick up strongly.”

Diesel demand rose 3.3% to about 79 million tonnes while petrol consumptio­n increased 7.1% to around 25 million tonnes. LPG usage rose 8.1% to about 23 million tonnes. — Bloomberg

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