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India ends four-year petrol diesel freeze with Rs 3 hike as Iran war cranks crude costs higher
Economy
Published on 16 May 2026

Oil firms say the hike still leaves a huge gap
State-run oil companies in India raised petrol and diesel prices by Rs 3 per litre, the first pump hike in four years, following crude surges after the Iran war. The government aimed to trim losses for fuel retailers but expects higher freight costs and added inflation pressure. While industry executives wanted a bigger increase, they say the revision fails to close the under-recovery gap. Procurement costs have risen sharply as the Indian crude basket and the rupee both worsened, with more hikes likely.
- Petrol and diesel prices increased by Rs 3 per litre
- First pump-price hike in four years after Iran war crude shock
- Under-recovery gap: Rs 14/litre petrol, Rs 42/litre diesel
- Indian crude averaged $106.2 per barrel in May vs $69 in February
- Rupee weakened by about Rs 5 since the war started and Rs 10 yearly
- OMCs see combined monthly loss of about Rs 30,000 crore
Read the full story at The Economic Times
This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on
The Economic Times
