Excise duty cut: Petrol price slashed by Rs 8.69/ltr, diesel by Rs 7.05/ltr

Diesel is priced at Rs 92.76 a liter in Kolkata previously Rs 99.83 and Rs 94.24 in Chennai earlier Rs 100.94. Announcing the duty cut through tweets, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had also stated that the government will give Rs 200 per cylinder subsidy to the poor who got cooking gas connection under the Ujjwala scheme, for 12 cylinders in a year to help ease some of the burden arising from cooking gas rates rising to record levels. A 14.2-kg LPG cylinder costs Rs 1,003 in the national capital.


PTI | New Delhi | Updated: 22-05-2022 10:50 IST | Created: 22-05-2022 10:42 IST
Excise duty cut: Petrol price slashed by Rs 8.69/ltr, diesel by Rs 7.05/ltr
Representative Image Image Credit: ANI
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Petrol price on Sunday was slashed by Rs 8.69 a liter and diesel by Rs 7.05 per liter following the government cutting excise duty on auto fuels to give relief to consumers battered by high fuel prices that have also pushed inflation to a record high.

The government on Saturday announced a record Rs 8 per liter cut in excise duty on petrol and Rs 6 per liter reduction on diesel.

The excise duty cut will translate into a reduction of Rs 8.69 a liter on petrol in Delhi and Rs 7.05 per liter in diesel after taking into account its impact on other levies.

Petrol in the national capital now costs Rs 96.72 a liter as against Rs 105.41 previously. Diesel is now priced at Rs 89.62 per liter as opposed to Rs 96.67 earlier, a price notification from state-owned fuel retailers showed.

In Mumbai, petrol rates have been slashed to Rs 111.35 a liter from Rs 120.51, while diesel rates have come down to Rs 97.28 per liter from Rs 104.77.

Rates differ from state to state depending on the incidence of local taxes such as VAT.

Petrol now costs Rs 106.03 a liter in Kolkata (earlier Rs 115.12) and Rs 102.63 in Chennai (previously Rs 110.85). Diesel is priced at Rs 92.76 a liter in Kolkata (previously Rs 99.83) and Rs 94.24 in Chennai (earlier Rs 100.94).

Announcing the duty cut through tweets, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had also stated that the government will give Rs 200 per cylinder subsidy to the poor who got cooking gas connection under the Ujjwala scheme, for 12 cylinders in a year to help ease some of the burden arising from cooking gas rates rising to record levels.

A 14.2-kg LPG cylinder costs Rs 1,003 in the national capital. Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana beneficiaries will get Rs 200 subsidy directly in their bank account and the effective price for them would be Rs 803 per 14.2-kg cylinder.

There was no subsidy paid on cooking gas since June 2020, and all users including Ujjwala beneficiaries bought cylinders at the market rate, which currently is Rs 1,003 in Delhi.

The Rs 200 subsidy will cost the government Rs 6,100 crore, she had said.

State-owned fuel retailers passed on the excise duty cut to consumers despite losing Rs 13.08 a liter on petrol and Rs 24.09 per liter on diesel because of holding rates even though raw material (crude oil) costs surged.

This excise duty cuts along with Rs 5 cut on petrol and a Rs 10 reduction on diesel affected from November 4, 2021, rolls back the Rs 13 and Rs 16 per liter increase in taxes on petrol and diesel effected between March 2020 and May 2020 to avoid passing on to consumers the sharp fall in international oil prices.

The excise duty hikes of 2020 had taken central taxes on petrol to their highest level of Rs 32.9 per liter and that on diesel to Rs 31.8 a liter.

After the latest excise cut, the incidence of central tax on petrol will come down to Rs 19.9 a liter and that on diesel to Rs 15.8 per liter.

She exhorted all state governments to also cut local sales tax or VAT.

Post-November 2021 reduction in excise duty on petrol by Rs 5 per liter and that on diesel by Rs 10 a liter, 25 states and UTs had cut VAT to give further reprieve to consumers battered by record-high retail prices.

However, states ruled by non-NDA parties like Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal, Kerala, and Tamil Nadu had not reduced VAT.

Post that reduction, state-owned oil firms held petrol and diesel prices for a record 137-day period during which international oil prices rose from USD 84 per barrel to a near a 14-year high of USD 140 per barrel.

They finally broke the hiatus with a Rs 10 per liter increase on both petrol and diesel in 16 days starting March 22, but again hit a freeze button after the last revision on April 6, despite not covering all of the cost.

Brent - the world's most known crude benchmark - was at USD 112.55 per barrel on Sunday.

Holding of prices despite rising in cost had led to lower earnings of fuel retailers in the January-March quarter.

Central excise duty makes up for 20 percent of the price of petrol, down from 26 percent earlier. It now makes up 17.6 percent of diesel price. After considering local sales tax or VAT, the total tax incidence on the price of petrol is 37 percent and that on diesel is 32 percent, down from 40-42 percent earlier.

The excise tax on petrol was Rs 9.48 per liter when the Modi government took office in 2014 and that on diesel was Rs 3.56 a liter.

The government had between November 2014 and January 2016 raised excise duty on petrol and diesel on nine occasions to take away gains arising from plummeting global oil prices.

In all, duty on petrol rate was hiked by Rs 11.77 per liter and that on diesel by 13.47 a liter in those 15 months that helped government's excise mop up more than double to Rs 2,42,000 crore in 2016-17 from Rs 99,000 crore in 2014-15.

It cut excise duty by Rs 2 in October 2017 and by Rs 1.50 a year later. But it raised excise duty by Rs 2 per liter in July 2019.

It again raised excise duty on March 14, 2020, by Rs 3 per liter each. The government on May 6, 2020, again raised excise duties by Rs 10 per liter on petrol and Rs 13 per liter on diesel.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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