Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Wednesday, Feb 08, 2006


News
Features
Stocks
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Industry & Economy - Petroleum


Oil Ministry urges Rangarajan panel to submit report soon

Richa Mishra

New Delhi , Feb. 7

WITH the Budget exercise gaining momentum, the Petroleum Ministry has urged the Rangarajan Committee to submit its report at the earliest if the committee decides to recommend tax and duty proposals relating to the sector.

To ensure that the oil companies make reasonable return on their investments, the Ministry has suggested to the committee headed by Dr C Rangarajan to consider reduction in the customs duty on crude oil and also on petroleum products - petrol and diesel.

The Ministry has proposed rationalisation of duties and also considering specific duties against ad-valorem. Industry has recommended that the customs duty on imported crude oil be reduced to nil and the duty structure of petroleum products be fixed in such a way that the overall tariff protection is maintained at 10 per cent.

According to sources, the Government would take a final view after the receipt of the committee's recommendations, which is expected soon.

Sources indicated that the report could be submitted in two parts. While the first part would suggest the duty structure, the second part would propose a long-term policy.

Oil companies have been suffering huge under recoveries during the current financial year on the four petroleum products - LPG, kerosene, petrol and diesel. In the case of Indian Oil, including IBP Co Ltd, which accounts for 55 per cent of the state-owned unit's market share, the under recoveries on these four products in April-December 2005 stood at Rs 9,020 crore.

The under recovery on LPG and kerosene stood at Rs 5,350 crore and on petrol and diesel at Rs 3,670 crore.

The loss for the third quarter of the current fiscal of Indian Oil stood at Rs 6 crore and IBP at Rs 96 crore. The under recoveries have arisen mainly due to prices not being revised upwards in line with the international prices of the petroleum products and therefore, requiring reduction in customs duty on crude oil and petroleum products (petrol and diesel) and rationalisation of duties, sources said.

In fact, the Expert Technical Group (ETG), in its report on deregulation of the hydrocarbon sector, had recommended that the customs duty on crude oil imports be gradually reduced to nil. The present rate of duty is five per cent. As regards the differential in the rates of duty between crude oil and petroleum products, the ETG has suggested that it should be kept at 10 per cent minimum.

More Stories on : Petroleum | Taxation

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Stories in this Section
First batch graduates from GE Foundation


Global meet on renewable energy in Hyderabad
CSO pegs growth at 8.1 pc — Estimates surpass expectations of RBI, Finance Minister
Sikkim annual Plan size fixed at Rs 550 cr
Finance Ministry not for levying health cess
Oil Ministry urges Rangarajan panel to submit report soon
Oil fall will translate to higher stocks, lower bonds
Is oil equity stakes in politically volatile regions a risk?
AP seeks market regulator for upstream gas
Maharashtra not to ban all plastic carry bags
APERC to hold public hearing
MTNL to get huge tax refund — `Licence fee is biz expense'
FBT hits insurance cos' group business
MPs seek re-look at fringe benefit tax
Manufacturing council prefers national value-added tax to GST
Rise in metal prices hits medium, small units
`State council' mooted to protect SMEs
Pampa-Vaipar link project off Centre's priority list: Minister
IIT-M introduces integrated masters programme
Agri-business policy under review: Sahay
Dubai gold imports up at 522 tonnes in 2005
India concerned about data protection: DIPP
Pune Expo 2006 opens tomorrow
Print expo to showcase latest tech developments



The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2006, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line