Tuesday, February 4, 2014

CNG prices to be cut by Rs 15, piped cooking gas by Rs 5

CNG prices to be cut by Rs 15, piped cooking gas by Rs 5 Updated on : 04-02-2014 03:10 AM
CNG prices will be cut by a steep Rs 15 per kg and piped cooking gas by Rs 5 after the government rejigged domestic gas supplies to raise allocations to fuel retailers in cities such as Delhi and Ahmedabad.


Prices of CNG, or compressed natural gas, in the national capital had been hiked by Rs 4.50 last month to Rs 50.10 a kg after retailers such as Indraprastha Gas Ltd (IGL) were forced to buy a fifth of their gas (LNG) requirements from overseas.

The price increase led to protests from the newly elected Aam Aadmi Party-led government in Delhi as well as autorickshaw operators, who had called a maha-panchayat this week to decide on a possible strike.

Oil Minister M Veerappa Moily said the government has now decided to meet all the requirements of CNG and piped cooking gas retailers in the country from domestic fields, sparing them the need to buy costlier LNG (liquefied natural gas).

With all the input fuel available at USD 4.2 per million British thermal units as against imported LNG, which is three times costlier, "the price of CNG in Delhi would be reduced by about Rs 15 per kg (about 30 per cent).

There will also be a reduction of about Rs 5 per cubic metre (about 20 per cent) in the price of PNG," Moily said.

Supplies to CNG retailers have been increased by cutting about 1.9 million standard cubic meters per day or one-third of the domestic gas allocated to non-core users in the steel, oil refineries and petrochemical sectors.

CNG retailers, or city gas distributors, will get 8.32 mmscmd of gas from fields given to ONGC and Oil India, as compared to 6.4 mmscmd presently.

Oil Secretary Vivek Rae said while the orders to increase domestic gas supply to CNG entities were issued on Monday, the decision will take two-three days to take effect as gas firms tie-up and sign new supply agreements.

There will be no cut in rates in Mumbai, which gets all its gas requirements from domestic fields.

However, in Delhi, which presently uses as much as 28 per cent of the costlier, imported LNG, and cities in Gujarat such as Ahmedabad, which too were heavily reliant on imported fuel, will see a price cut.

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