Indian state refiners’ gasoline sales in the first two weeks of February fell below pre-pandemic levels, the first decline in about six months, preliminary industry data showed, as record-high retail prices hit consumption.
Diesel sales, which are related closely to economic growth and account for about 40 per cent of overall refined fuel sales in India, fell by 8.6 per cent in the first half of February, the largest decline since August last year, reports Reuters citing the data.
Gasoline and gasoil prices in India have risen to a record high, mirroring global markets. Taxes account for about 61 per cent of retail gasoline prices and about 56 per cent of diesel prices.
State fuel retailers sold 1.03 million tonnes of gasoline and 2.84 million tonnes of diesel from Feb. 1-15, the data provided by an industry source showed.
“Definitely sales of petrol and diesel have declined in the last few days. People are feeling the pinch of high oil prices,” said Ajay Bansal, president of the All India Petroleum Dealers Association.
State companies - Indian Oil Corp, Hindustan Petroleum Corp, and Bharat Petroleum - own about 90 per cent of India’s retail fuel outlets.
“First area where the customers vent their anger or show their grievance is the petrol pump to our staff and we have been seeing it,” Bansal said.
Rising diesel and petrol prices could push up inflation, making it harder for the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to continue its accommodative monetary policy.
“Pump prices of petrol and diesel have reached historical highs. An unwinding of taxes on petroleum products by both the centre and the states could ease the cost-push pressures,” the RBI said in its policy document earlier this month.
State retailers sold 1.2 million tonnes of liquefied petroleum gas in the first half of this month, 5.4 per cent higher than last year, while jet fuel sales declined by 41.3 per cent as curbs on air travel remained in place, the data showed.