INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Petrol in Delhi currently costs Rs 101.19 a litre and diesel is priced at Rs 88.62 per litreA surge in international oil prices may
translate into an increase in the retail selling price of petrol and diesel in India as oil companies face extreme margin squeeze, sources
said.Petrol and diesel prices have remained unchanged for 12 days but now the international rate surge is exerting pressure
Current prices of petrol and diesel in the international market are higher by around $4-6 per barrel as compared to average prices during
However, no increase in retail prices has been affected by oil companies so far, sources said.In case international prices remain at this
level, oil marketing companies (OMCs) will have to increase retail prices of petrol and diesel, they said
Retail prices of petrol and diesel were last increased on July 17 and July 15 respectively.Petrol in Delhi currently costs Rs 101.19 a litre
and diesel is priced at Rs 88.62 per litre
Average international crude oil prices had fallen by more than $3 per barrel in August as compared to the previous month
This came against the backdrop of mixed economic data from the US and China and mobility restrictions in Asia fuelled by the fast-spreading
Delta variant.Accordingly, retail prices of petrol and diesel in the Delhi market were reduced by Rs 0.65 a litre and Rs 1.25 per
litre by oil marketing companies from July 18 onwards
The last downward revision was on September 5
However, with the latest developments in the international market, crude oil prices have started to surge consistently since the last
week of August.The crude oil production outages in North America from a fire at Mexico's offshore platform and the disruptions caused by
Hurricane Ida on US Gulf Coast have triggered a steep rise in oil prices
Ida, the worst storm to hit the US Gulf Coast since hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005, could result in a total crude supply loss of up to
30 million barrels, as per IEA.Further, falling US crude oil inventories and expectations of improvement in demand have also contributed
to the recent spurt in prices
OPEC in its monthly oil market report for September has maintained a growth forecast of 6.0 million barrels per day in world oil demand
for 2021. As per OPEC, increasing vaccination rates and steady economic developments in major economies are expected to support
crude oil demand.For Q4 2021, world oil demand is expected to increase by 1.24 million barrels per day from Q3 2021
For 2022, OPEC projects oil demand to reach 100.8 mb/d, exceeding pre-pandemic levels
With even IEA reporting optimism over increasing vaccination rates and likely improvement in demand outlook, international oil prices might
remain firm in the near term, sources said.