Nepal Oil Corporation (NOC) has finally decreased the prices of petroleum products, after a pressure from the public.
According to the state oil monopoly, the price of petrol, diesel and kerosene has been reduced by Rs 3 per liter with effect from today midnight.
With the reduction, per liter of petrol will cost Rs 178 and per liter of diesel and kerosene will cost Rs 175. Earlier, the price of petrol was Rs 181 and diesel and kerosene was Rs 178.
The Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) has sent a new price list to NOC today after reducing the price of fuel. In its revised price list sent yesterday, the IOC has reduced the prices of petrol by Rs 6.90 per liter, diesel by Rs 12.31 per liter and aviation fuel by Rs 10.61 per liter. According to the revised price, the NOC earns profits of Rs 17 per liter and Rs 10 per liter, in petrol and diesel, respectively, a press note of the NOC reads, projecting that the NOC will earn a profit of Rs 2 billion in the next one month. NOC, however, has kept the prices of aviation turbine fuel (ATF) unchanged at Rs 190 per liter for domestic airlines and $1.645 for international carriers. Likewise, the price of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) – popularly known as cooking gas –remains the same at Rs 1,800 per liter, the press note adds.
According to the an auto-pricing system, the NOC can increase the price of petroleum products, if the price in international market goes up, and vice versa. But the NOC – citing its earlier loss – has not been reducing the price of petroleum products, despite price decrease in the international market.
This time, the state oil monopoly has been forced to reduce the price due to public pressure. It has reduced the prices of petroleum products today after five months, though the fuel price in the international market has declined by more than 28 per cent.
Last time the NOC had revised the fuel prices was on July 4, when the price of petrol was increased to Rs 181 per liter, and diesel and kerosene was increased to Rs 172 per liter. Since then, the price of crude dropped to $80.86 per barrel from around $112 per barrel in the international market.
But the NOC has been repeatedly claiming that it has been adopting the auto-pricing system since September, 2014. Breaching its own policy, the NOC has not been decreasing the price of petroleum products lately. It claims that it still owns Rs 19 billion to its supplier IOC. Despite selling in profits, how the NOC is in red is beyond the imagination that led to suspicion.
The NOC has also set up a price stabilisation fund to adjust the price, if it goes down. But the NOC is blamed for misusing the fund too. Consumer rights activists blame the NOC for passing the price burden (loss) to consumers as it failed to manage the public entity.
The government gives no ear to the rising petroleum prices, as it gets hefty taxes from the petroleum business that has not been regulated through an Act yet despite repeated pressure from the public. The government entity – NOC – is doing billions worth petroleum business without any Act, which is why the petroleum business is under scrutiny.
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