Petrol-diesel prices will rise

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The price of petrol could touch from Rs. 80 to Rs 90 and diesel Rs. 68 to Rs 75 per litre if global oil rates surge to $60 a barrel, says a report from credit ratings agency CRISIL. Global oil prices have surged to nearly $55 per barrel, following an agreement by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to cut production.

OPEC, which accounts for nearly one-third of global oil output, on November 28 reached an agreement to cut output by 1.2 million barrels per day (mbpd) from January 1, its first reduction since 2008. Global oil prices have already surged by 19 per cent since then.

Non-OPEC producers are expected to agree to add an output cut of 0.6 million barrels per day at a meeting on December 10 in Vienna.

“The price of Brent crude could increase to $50-55 per barrel by March 2017 following OPEC’s move, and if it surges to $60 as some believe, the price of petrol could touch Rs. 80 and diesel Rs. 68 per litre,” the CRISIL report said.

Petrol-diesel prices will rise

CRISIL on its part expects global crude price to remain between $50 per barrel and $55 per barrel for first half of calendar year 2017.

This could mean that the “price of petrol could rise 5-8 per cent and that of diesel by 6-8 per cent over the next three to four months. In Mumbai, that would mean petrol price could top Rs. 75 per litre compared with Rs. 72 now, and diesel more than Rs. 64 compared with Rs. 60 now,” the report said.

Petrol and diesel prices are deregulated in India, which means they are linked to market rates. Oil marketing companies revise their prices every fortnight, depending on global oil rates and the rupee’s movement against dollar. India imports more than three-fourth of its crude oil requirement. So apart from global oil prices, the value of the rupee as well as the margins of oil marketing companies and the various government levies determine the final price of petrol and diesel price in India.

Petrol-diesel prices will rise

Analysts, however, are sceptical over the long-term impact of the OPEC’s move on oil prices. “A cut in production always lifts prices, but the success of the OPEC agreement depends on adherence.

Previously, there have been instances of members breaking away from the cartel because of domestic compulsions,” CRISIL said.

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