Hindustan Times (East UP)

Diesel price hiked by 25 paise

- Feedback@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: Diesel price on Sunday was hiked by 25 paise per litre—the second increase in rates after the state-owned oil firms ended a three-week hiatus in rates following internatio­nal oil prices surging to their highest since 2018.

Price of diesel was hiked to ₹89.07 per litre in Delhi and to ₹96.68 in Mumbai, according to a price notificati­on of stateowned fuel retailers.

Petrol price was not changed. It costs ₹101.19 a litre in Delhi and ₹107.26 in Mumbai.

State-owned Indian Oil Corp (IOC), Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd (BPCL) and Hindustan Petroleum Corp Ltd (HPCL) had on September 24 resumed daily price revision, ending the pause in rates hit since September 5.

On September 24, diesel rates were hiked by 20 paise a litre. On that day too petrol price had remained unchanged.

Global benchmark Brent crude has risen to $77.50 a barrel as crude inventorie­s shrunk from Europe to the US. Oil rates are up 2% for the week and this is the fifth weekly gain.

The price of petrol and diesel in the internatio­nal market has risen by around $6-7 per barrel this month as compared to average prices during August.

But oil companies, which are supposed to revise prices daily in line with the cost, did not change rates for almost three weeks. They have now started to pass on the increase to customers.

Average internatio­nal crude oil prices had fallen by more than $3 per barrel in August as compared to the previous month. This came against the backdrop of mixed economic data from the US and China and mobility restrictio­ns in Asia fuelled by the fast-spreading Delta variant of Covid.

Accordingl­y, retail prices of petrol and diesel in the Delhi market were reduced by ₹0.65 a litre and ₹1.25 per litre by oil marketing companies from July 18 onwards. The last downward revision was on September 5.

Prior to that, the petrol price was increased by ₹11.44 a litre between May 4 and July 17. Diesel rate had gone up by ₹9.14 during this period.

The price hike during this period pushed petrol prices above the ₹100-a-litre mark in more than half of the country, while diesel crossed that level in at least three states.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India