Hindustan Times (Noida)

Why Sri Ganganagar has to pay the highest

- Sachin Saini sachin.saini@htlive.com (With PTI inputs)

In a first for any place in India, the price of petrol crossed the ₹100/litre mark on Wednesday in the remotest district of Rajasthan, Sri Ganganagar.

The price of petrol touched ₹100.33 on Wednesday in Sri Ganganagar. The correspond­ing price in Jaipur was ₹95.99. The difference is because of transporta­tion charges levied by oil companies.

At a rally in Tamil Nadu, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the middle-class would not have been burdened because of increase in fuel prices if the previous government­s had focussed on reducing India’s energy import dependence.

Rajasthan levies the highest VAT on petrol in the country — at 36% plus ₹1.5 per litre road cess. This is on top of the ₹32.90/ litre tax on petrol levied by the Centre and the new agri-cess.

JAIPUR: In a first for any place in India, the price of petrol crossed the ₹100/litre mark on Wednesday in the remotest district of Rajasthan, Sri Ganganagar.

The price of petrol touched ₹100.33 on Wednesday in Sri Ganganagar. The correspond­ing price in Jaipur was ₹95.99. The difference is because of transporta­tion charges levied by oil companies.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday said the middle-class would not have been burdened because of increase in fuel prices if the previous government­s had focussed on reducing India’s energy import dependence.

India imported over 85% of its oil requiremen­t in 2019-20 financial year and nearly 53% of its gas, he pointed out.

“Can we be so import-dependent?,” he asked at a virtual event to inaugurate oil and gas projects in poll-bound Tamil Nadu.

On February 14, the price of premium petrol reached ₹102.07 a litre in Sri Ganganagar following which the Rajasthan government reduced the value added tax (VAT) on petrol and diesel. At the time, Rajasthan had the highest VAT rate on fuel among the big states in the country — 36% on petrol and 26% on diesel.

This is on top of the ₹32.90 per litre tax on petrol and ₹31.80 per litre tax on diesel levied by the central government and the new agri-cess. Global oil prices have strengthen­ed in the past few months, resulting in an increase in fuel prices.

In the state assembly on Monday, Rajasthan chief minister Ashok Gehlot said the Centre was responsibl­e for high fuel prices because it was not reducing the taxes. “If we reduce the taxes then our revenue will decline. In view of the public sentiments, despite the pandemic, the state reduced 2 percentage points of VAT resulting in a loss of ₹1,000 crore. Now, the Centre should reduce the taxes to lessen the burden on people,” Gehlot said.

Prices within a state vary on account of transporta­tion costs.

Rajasthan Petroluem Dealers’ Associatio­n president Sunit Bagai said there is difference of ₹4.09 a litre in petrol prices between Sri Ganganagar and Jaipur because of this.

In Rajasthan, he added, oil marketing companies charge around ₹3.50 per litre, plus taxes for transporta­tion. The price in Sri Ganganagar is high because the petrol there is supplied from Jaipur or Jodhpur, around 500 km away.

To be sure, oil pricing has been deregulate­d in India, with the prices being fixed (and changed) by state-owned oil marketers and not the government. As prices declined last year, both Centre and states increased levies to shore up finances in a year when their revenue was under pressure.

Modi said his government is sensitive to the concerns of the middle-class and focussed on raising the share of ethanol mixing in petrol. India, he said, is looking to cut energy import dependence and diversify its sources of energy.

ON FEB 14, THE PRICE OF PREMIUM PETROL REACHED ₹102.07 A LITRE IN SRI GANGANAGAR AFTER WHICH THE STATE GOVT REDUCED THE VAT

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India