State refiners' daily petrol and diesel sales declined by about a fifth in May from a month earlierThe country's fuel demand slumped in May to its lowest since August last year with a second COVID-19 wave stalling mobility and muting economic activity in the world's third largest oil consumer.
Oil demand fell 11.3 per centto 15.11 million tonnes compared to the previous month and was down 1.5 per centfrom a year earlier, data from the Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell (PPAC) of the Oil Ministry showed on Wednesday."It's primarily because of the lockdowns, but it's very difficult to isolate the impact on demand as even high oil prices could sort of pinch a little bit in terms of demand recovering more slowly," said Prashant Vashist, Vice President and Co-Group head at ICRA.Indian state refiners' daily petrol and dieselsales declined by about a fifth in May from a month earlier due to the pandemic, but higher fuel prices have also sapped consumption.
The country's total coronavirus infections crossed 27 million and hit record daily levels last month, putting the government "on a war footing" to contain the spread.However, as cases decline, parts of the country are expected to ease movement restrictions, which could boost demand.
"Everybody is expecting the recovery will be faster this time...
so in another quarter or so probably we should be somewhere close to pre-pandemic levels," Vashist added.Diesel consumption, a key parameter linked to economic growth and which accounts for about 40 per centof overall refined fuel sales in India, rose 0.7 per centyear-on-year, but dipped 17 per centfrom the previous month to 5.53 million tonnes.
Sales of petrol, increased by 12.4 per centfrom a year earlier, but fell about 17 per centmonth-on-month to 1.99 million tonnes.
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