Nepalis consume Rs 12.60 million
worth petroleum products per hour – which is around Rs 2 million more – from a
year ago, when they used to consume around Rs 10.97 million worth fuel per hour.
The consumption-led economy has
imported Rs 27.23 billion worth petroleum products – the single largest import
of the country against the total export receipt of Rs 23.07 billion – in the first
three months of the current fiscal year 2013-14, according to the central bank.
In the same period last fiscal year
2012-13, the country had imported Rs 23.70 billion worth petroleum products
The per hour petroleum products
consumption a year ago – in 2011-12 – first three months stood at Rs 8.38
million. In the first three months of the fiscal year 2011-12, the country had
imported Rs 18.10 billion worth petroleum products, the central bank data
revealed.
Likewise,
per head consumption of petroleum products has increased to Rs 1,027.54, though,
according to the latest census of the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), about 64
per cent of the total 5.42 million households in the country use firewood as
usual source of fuel for cooking and 21.03 per cent of the population use LPG
or popularly known as cooking gas, while kerosene is used for cooking by only 1.03
per cent of the total households. "In the urban areas some 67.68
per cent of the total households use LPG as their usual fuel for cooking,"
it reported.
The rising number of vehicles –
due to easy and cheap financing by the bank and financial institutions – and
rising income, apart from scheduled power outage that has forced the industries
use diesel to operate has also fuelled the petroleum consumption.
Kathmandu alone consumes 31 per cent of petroleum
products imported as it operates about 100 Mega Watt of private diesel
generators, according to a study.
Nepalis sure have a lot of petroleum products to spare.
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