1 / 2

End to relentless petrol, diesel price rise brings no joy as cuts minuscule 

End to relentless petrol, diesel price rise brings no joy as cuts minuscule on Business Standard. These small cuts contrast against the nearly Rs 4 per litre rise in petrol prices during May 14-29, with the daily hike in prices varying around 15-30 paise a litre <br>

Download Presentation

End to relentless petrol, diesel price rise brings no joy as cuts minuscule 

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. End to relentless petrol, diesel price rise brings no joy as cuts minuscule These small cuts contrast against the nearly Rs 4 per litre rise in petrol prices during May 14-29, with the daily hike in prices varying around 15-30 paise a litre

  2. High fuel prices have burnt a hole in the common man's pockets. With mounting frustration, rates have been cut for the third consecutive day today. However, this is likely to be cold comfort for most given that the reduction in prices has been minuscule. Prices for petrol and diesel fell by 6 paise and 5 paise per litre, respectively, on Friday. After a one paisa cut in fuel prices, petrol prices across the four metros were cut on Thursday by seven paise a litre and diesel prices fell by five paise. Petrol now costs Rs 78.29 per litre in Delhi, while the price of diesel has been revised to Rs 69.20 a litre. The revised Petrol prices in other metro cities are -- Rs 80.92 in Kolkata, Rs 86.10 in Mumbai, and Rs 81.28 in Chennai. The revised diesel prices are Rs 71.75 in Kolkata, Rs 73.67 in Mumbai, and 73.06 in Chennai. How does this measure up against the previous hike in petrol prices? These cuts contrast against the nearly Rs 4 per litre rise in prices during May 14-29, with the daily hike in prices varying around 15-30 paise a litre. Similarly, diesel prices in all the four metros also were at record levels during the period. A direct comparison of prices brings home the point. In the national capital on Thursday, petrol was sold at Rs 78.35 per litre, down from Rs 78.42 on Wednesday. Compared to Friday's prices, that is just a 13 paise difference in the favour of the consumer. On Thursday, in the other key cities of Kolkata, Mumbai, and Chennai, the fuel was priced at Rs 80.98, Rs 86.16, and Rs 81.35 a litre, respectively. All these prices were down by seven paise from Wednesday's levels. On Thursday, diesel prices in Delhi, Kolkata, Mumbai, and Chennai stood at Rs 69.25, Rs 71.80, Rs 73.73, and Rs 73.12 per litre, respectively. After 16 days of relentless price hikes that followed lifting of a nearly three-week hiatus on price revision just before Karnataka went to polls, petrol and diesel prices were cut for the first time on Wednesday. However, the quantum of reduction was just one paisa.

More Related