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India's petrol demand seen hitting record as Covid curbs ease

Changes in India's fuel demand patterns are crucial for global oil markets as Asia's third-largest economy is seen as the main driver of rising demand
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The stronger-than-expected petrol consumption growth could prompt Indian refiners to import the fuel or boost gasoil exports in coming months. (REUTERS)

India's petrol demand is set to hit a record this fiscal year, with consumption accelerating as more people hit the road for business and leisure travel after the easing of Covid-19 curbs.

Also Read: Centre collected 3.35 lakh crore excise from petrol, diesel in last fiscal

Shunning trains, buses and planes, safety-conscious Indians are buying more cars and increasingly using personal vehicles to commute as they embark on 'revenge travel' - flocking to tourist destinations after months of restrictions, despite record-high fuel prices.

Annual passenger vehicle sales in India rose by 45% to 264,442 units in July, driven by pent-up demand, according to data from the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers.

The stronger-than-expected petrol consumption growth could prompt Indian refiners to import the fuel or boost gasoil exports in coming months. Indian refineries are traditionally configured to maximise production of diesel, where demand is still below pre-Covid levels, hurt by an uneven economic recovery.

"We may have to import some quantity of petrol if momentum in demand continues," said an official at an Indian state-run refiner, who declined to be identified as he is not authorised to speak to the media.

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"We cannot increase crude throughput as some refiners have high levels of diesel inventory and export margins for diesel are not attractive."

The expected rise in India's petrol imports could support Asian refiners' margins for the fuel. The country, which has a refining surplus, has shunned gasoline imports since May and raised gasoil exports by a fifth in July from April, government data showed.

Sluggish diesel demand has forced some refiners to cut crude oil processing as their fuel storage were full. That reduced India's July crude oil imports to their lowest in a year.

Changes in India's fuel demand patterns are crucial for global oil markets as Asia's third-largest economy is seen as the main driver of rising demand for energy over the next two decades, the International Energy Agency said in February.

Credit rating agency Moody's India unit ICRA expects India's petrol consumption to rise 14% to a record 31.9 million tonnes (739,000 bpd) in the fiscal year to March 2022, higher than the 12.2% growth estimates by the Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell of the oil ministry.

Consultancy FGE now forecasts quarterly petrol demand will rise by 20,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 760,000 bpd for October to December, up from an earlier estimate of 740,000 bpd. This brings FGE's annual forecast to March 2022 to 725,000 bpd, up 11% from the previous year.

"Owning a personal vehicle used to be a status symbol but because of the hunger to travel during the pandemic, people are buying cars and scooters, and driving up petrol demand," Sri Paravaikkarasu, director for Asia oil at FGE said.

India's petrol demand rebound follows that of China, where consumption of the fuel is expected to rise by 11% to 13% this year to a record 3.8 million to 4.1 million bpd.

Diesel

On the other hand, gasoil consumption - which accounts for two-fifths of refined fuel use in the country and is a barometer of industrial activity - is expected to take well into the fourth quarter or even next year to recover to pre-pandemic levels.

India is also gradually cutting dependence on diesel as it looks to fully electrify its vast railway network by end-2023, allow trucks to carry more weight, and increase power generation capacity from cleaner fuel sources.

Mukesh Surana, chairman of Hindustan Petroleum Corp (HPCL) said diesel demand could reach pre-COVID levels on a monthly basis later this year but for the fiscal year it would still remain below the pre-pandemic level.

"There has to be a complete recovery of the industrial and construction sectors and whole demand and supply chain should come to full swing, until that happens you will not get the full impact of recovery on the diesel side," Surana said.

First Published Date: 02 Sep 2021, 17:17 PM IST
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