India cuts excise duties on petrol, diesel as global oil prices surge

Sets windfall tax on export of diesel at 21.5 rupees per litre, fiscal hit estimated at 70b rupees per fortnight

People queue to fill petrol in their two-wheelers with concerns over potential supply disruptions, but authorities say there are no shortages, amid the ongoing US-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Ahmedabad, India, March 23, 2026. Photo: Reuters

India has slashed excise duties on petrol and diesel to protect consumers ​and curb a potential spike in inflation, while imposing windfall taxes on aviation fuel and diesel exports, amid volatile global oil markets due to ‌the Iran war.

Global oil prices have surged past $100 per barrel after the near closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which serves as a conduit for 40% of India's crude oil imports, since the United States and Israel first struck Iran on February 28.

In a government order late on Thursday, India's finance ministry reduced the special excise duty on petrol to three rupees ($0.0318) per litre from 13 rupees. It also cut the ​duty on diesel to zero from 10 rupees per litre.

Read: Oil drops as Trump pauses Iran strikes, but stock traders nervous

The move comes ahead of elections next month in four Indian states and one federal territory, with ​voters very sensitive to higher prices.

India will lose 70 billion rupees ($739 million) a fortnight from the excise cuts, although it will recover ⁠part of this —15 billion rupees — through separate export taxes on some fuel products, Vivek Chaturvedi, chairman of the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs, told a press ​briefing.

The net hit to government finances will be 55 billion rupees per fortnight.

The yield on 10-year government bonds rose seven basis points to 6.95%, its highest level in 20 months, ​on concerns that the government may struggle to meet its fiscal deficit target of 4.3% of GDP for the financial year beginning April.

The tax cuts also ease the burden for oil marketing companies. While fuel prices in India are technically deregulated, state-run oil companies, which control 90% of the retail network, do not always raise prices when crude climbs.

As a result, consumers are shielded from volatility, with ​either the government or the companies absorbing the increases.

"Government has taken a huge hit on its taxation revenues to ensure very high losses of oil companies, approximately 24 rupees ​a litre for petrol and 30 rupees a litre for diesel, at this time of sky-high international prices, are reduced," Oil Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said in a post on X.

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