TMCnet News

Nepal deregulates retail prices of petrol, diesel
[February 13, 2006]

Nepal deregulates retail prices of petrol, diesel


(Comtex Energy Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge)KATHMANDU, Feb 14, 2006 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- In a landmark decision, the
Nepali government has decided to end the decades-old administrated
pricing of petrol and diesel at retail level and has limited its
role to fixing the wholesale pricing in two major petroleum
products, an official at Nepal Oil Corporation (NOC) said here
Tuesday.

The decision has been taken as a first step towards
liberalization of petroleum market, the NOC Chief Umesh Dahal told
reporters.

NOC on Monday announced that it has brought the decision into
immediate effect and disclosed a different set of ex-depot
wholesale prices for petrol and diesel for dealers in different
geographical zones.

"The newly unveiled wholesale price, however, will not have any
impact on existing prices of petrol and diesel, as those have been
fixed in such a way that retail level prices will remain unchanged, " Dahal said.

The wholesale price was announced as a constant sales price of
NOC to dealers, and the dealers could add transportation and other
costs over it to fix the retail prices.

The price structure will be changed in future depending on the
experience, he said.

The new arrangement will free the NOC from the burden of
transportation cost it otherwise shouldered for dealers indirectly, according to Dahal.

It will reduce transportation cost of NOC by about 5 percent
and reduce the share of technical losses for NOC.

"Most importantly, it has set base for complete deregulation
for prices," Dahal said.

According to Dahal, as existing wholesale prices do not adjust
market prices in line with import cost, it has negligible impact
towards curtailing NOC's burgeoning loss, which currently stands
at 570 million Nepali rupees (8.1 million U.S. dollars) per month.

"The key to price deregulation lies on wholesale pricing and
the government has still preferred to retain full control over it.
This tendency must be corrected if the country is to address the
real problem of the sector," an official at Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Supplies said on condition of anonymity.

[ Back To TMCnet.com's Homepage ]