Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Heavy losses at CPC from spot purchases of fuel

- By Bandula Sirimanna

The Ceylon Petroleum Corporatio­n (CPC) has lost millions of US dollars in fuel purchases by resorting to spot buying from the market even though there is a US$ 500 million Indian credit line to import petrol and diesel.

The over-payments for fuel consignmen­ts and demurrage for the delay in clearing shipments due to difficulty in finding dollars along with irregulari­ties of corrupt officials were some of the reasons for these losses, an official observatio­n report revealed.

It has been observed that the CPC has also paid a sum of US $22 million as over-payments for four consignmen­ts of fuel procured under spot purchasing recently.According to official documents relating to the payment of a recent shipment of fuel, the pre invoice of the payment received on March 22 has indicated the price of the fuel consignmen­t as $52 million.

But the final invoice sent thereafter has stipulated the price of the same consignmen­t as $39 million. Ignoring the final invoice, the CPC has paid $52 million in settling the payment of the shipment on April 24, paying $13 million more than the last stipulated amount.

Another sum of $9 million over-payment had been paid for three other fuel consignmen­ts totaling $22 million, the report indicated. Further a sum of $4.2 million had been paid as demurrages by the CPC for shipments delayed at the port since this government came into power.

The CPC paid $558,000 for a recent consignmen­t of petrol imported from Vitol Company under short term spot purchasing, it added. It has been revealed that this money could have been saved if the authoritie­s expedited the fuel shipments under the Indian credit line, it said.

The Energy Minister has called for a comprehens­ive report on losses in spot purchases including demurrages and over-payments made by the CPC, a senior ministry official said. Delivering on India’s commitment to the people of Sri Lanka, close to 40,000 MT of petrol reached Colombo on Wednesday, the Indian High Commission in Colombo said.

With this Sri Lanka has received around 440,000 MT of various types of fuel from India with more to follow, it said in a Twitter message.

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