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Author Topic: Hike in diesel subsidy threatens oil fund  (Read 7295 times)

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Hike in diesel subsidy threatens oil fund
« on: March 05, 2011, 09:48:21 AM »
Hike in diesel subsidy threatens oil fund
By The Nation, Agencies
2011-03-05


Could run dry in 23 days after yet another move to keep Bt30 ceiling that costs Bt302m a day

Thailand has raised the diesel subsidy to Bt5 per litre amid worries that at the current rate the Oil Fund's reserves will be depleted in 23 days.


Once the Energy Policy Administration Committee's resolution takes effect today, the Oil Fund will need to spend Bt302 million a day to keep the diesel price below Bt30 per litre, up from Bt247 million earlier, or at a cost of Bt9 billion. Since the price-freeze policy started on December 17 until yesterday, the fund had spent Bt9 billion for the purpose.

The net reserves are consequently down to Bt7 billion and the amount will not last until the end of this month, said Energy Minister Wannarat Charnnukul. Two options are raised for discussion at the prime minister-chaired National Energy Policy Committee - a cut in the oil excise tax or lifting the diesel price ceiling.

"The government promised a budget allocation for the price freeze but now there is no clarity how the burden will be financed," Wannarat said. Earlier, there was a plan to use part of the petroleum royalty fee to subsidise the price of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), so as to raise the Oil Fund's capacity to freeze the diesel price. According to the minister, that is possible only with an amendment that might take one to two years from now.

The Oil Fund now sits on cash of about Bt15 billion. Still, it is liable to finance the Bt1.2-billion programme to convert LPG-fuelled taxis to natural gas for vehicles. Monthly, it needs to subsidise the NGV price by Bt2 per kilogram, or Bt400 million, and to handle the differential of domestic and international prices of LPG of about Bt2.2 billion.

The committee yesterday decided to raise the subsidy by 50 satang per litre, as oil spikes continue due to political upheaval in Libya and Middle Eastern countries. Dubai crude was US$109 (Bt3,325) per barrel yesterday, while refined diesel in Singapore cost nearly $130 per barrel.

Pissawan Atchanapornkul, chairwoman of Shell Company of Thailand, urged the government to consider lifting the ceiling from Bt30 per litre.

"The rise would help retailers, as this would improve the marketing margin, which is now below Bt1 per litre, though the government agrees that the appropriate level is Bt1.70. The price freeze is good to help lower the cost of living, but amid changing external factors there should be a review," she said yesterday.

There is no sign that rises in the price of oil will stop soon. Technical analysis by Glen Ward, head of retail derivatives at London Capital Group Holdings, shows that Brent crude for April settlement, now at $116.20, may advance past $119 a barrel as prices continually surge above ranges and moving averages.

The nine-day, 14-day and 40-day moving averages "are all pointing north", Ward said.

This is despite US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's speech on Thursday in which he said that the world could pump enough extra oil and has enough stashed in reserve to limit price shocks from sustained turmoil in the Middle East. International Monetary Fund spokeswoman Caroline Atkinson said at a news briefing on the same day that the IMF was worried about rising food prices, especially as they affect the poor and most vulnerable people. Indices by the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organisation show that food prices in February rose the highest in 20 years. The FAO warned that oil prices could push food prices higher.

"We're extremely concerned about rising food prices … It's important that people who are most vulnerable should be protected rather than products subsidised," she said.

Beyond rising food prices, Atkinson pointed to building inflation in some rapidly growing emerging economies. Some emerging countries are "getting to the point of potential overheating, and therefore central banks have been quite appropriately beginning to tighten monetary policy", she said, citing Brazil's monetary tightening.

Thailand is also expected to raise the policy interest rate at next Wednesday's meeting.

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Re: Hike in diesel subsidy threatens oil fund
« Reply #1 on: March 06, 2011, 06:27:30 AM »
Stand by for 35 baht/litre

 

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