Oil companies and government officials continued to trade accusations on Friday, with neither side willing to accept culpability for the sudden crunch in petrol supplies in the northern half of the country.
Both sides agree on one fact: there was an unprecedented surge in demand for petrol after the government decided to reduce prices. At a press conference on Friday night, Petroleum Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi said that demand had surged by 25% after the 27% drop in oil prices from their peak in June 2014. Both sides also agree that the oil companies did not have the legally required 20 days’ worth of inventory to help deal with supply disruptions. But that is where the agreement ends.
Government officials claimed that the lack of inventory was the sole reason for the petrol shortage. Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (Ogra) Chairman Saeed Ahmad Khan announced at a press conference on Friday that Ogra would be serving notices to oil companies for failing to meet the legally required levels of inventory.
But industry officials point out that if inventory was the only issue, then there would also be a shortage of diesel and the shortages would be uniform across the country. “The industry cannot be blamed for this situation. There is no shortage of diesel anywhere and petrol is available at all the pumps in Sindh and Balochistan,” said Aftab Husain, CEO of Pakistan Refinery and head of the Oil Companies Advisory Council (OCAC), an industry group.
Husain explained that one ship carrying 50,000 tons of oil products was delayed by a few days. “This, along with heavy fog in Punjab, hampered transportation and disrupted the supply chain,” he said.
Diesel is transported through a cross-country pipeline originating at Port Qasim, whereas petrol is transported mostly through trucks going north from Karachi.
Husain admitted that the oil industry often does not carry the full 20 days of required inventories, especially when prices are declining, but blamed government pricing policy for the situation. "Petroleum prices are revised once a month and whenever the price drops, we book a loss due to the reduced value of our petroleum stock," he said. “Complete deregulation of prices is the answer. But whenever we talk about it everyone starts writing against us.”
Ogra acknowledges the commercial difficulties faced by oil companies when prices are declining, but appears in no mood to accept this as an excuse for not complying with regulatory requirements, said the regulatory body’s chairman.
However, even though he blamed the oil companies for the current crisis, Khan agreed with their stance that oil and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) prices should be deregulated. “In the beginning it will not be pleasant, but it will be good in the long run due to market competition,” said the Ogra chairman.
Yet even though everyone agrees that the oil price drop resulted in an unprecedented surge in demand, the government is planning on decreasing prices even further. The petroleum minister announced at his press conference that prices could be reduced by more than Rs5 per litre in February. Abbasi also appeared to insist that the privately owned oil marketing companies were more responsible for the supply crunch than the state-owned PSO, even though PSO has a 65% share in the petrol market.
Sales of petrol tend to rise particularly sharply on the first day of a government-mandated price cut. “Petrol sales hit 40,000 tons on January 1,” admitted the petroleum minister.
The current crisis appears to have been worsened by the fact that alternatives to petrol – specifically compressed natural gas (CNG) – have largely been absent from the market due to a shutdown of gas supply to CNG stations in Punjab. Abbasi said that if the weather did not turn too cold, the government might consider reopening some of the supply of natural gas to CNG stations. Natural gas is the primary heating fuel in most of the affluent parts of urban Pakistan.
Meanwhile, at a hearing at the Senate finance committee on Friday, Federal Finance Secretary Waqar Masood suggested that the current shortage is just the tip of the iceberg and that the country could be facing a rough six weeks before the crisis is fully resolved. Masood’s timeline is far longer than the 10 to 12 days promised by cabinet members during their speeches in the National Assembly on the same day.
The finance secretary pointed out that there is a 45 day lag between when an oil company opens a letter of credit (LC) with a bank for oil imports and when the petrol is actually delivered to petrol pumps across the country. The finance ministry has released Rs17 billion to the state-owned PSO to handle its LC requirements, but admits the company needs Rs27 billion for this month alone.
Masood admitted that the inter-corporate circular debt in the energy industry, caused in large part by government entities refusing to make the full payments they owe power companies, was at least partially the cause of the crisis. PSO has defaulted on at least Rs110 billion in LCs owed to its foreign suppliers. The finance secretary claimed that the government had been making timely payments of the subsidies it owes to power companies, which in turn owe PSO money for the fuel they use to generate electricity.
However, he admitted that the finance ministry refused to pay amount related to the cost of theft, meaning that the power companies still do not have enough money to pay PSO. When the power companies fail to pay PSO on time, PSO defaults on its payments due to foreign suppliers, who then refuse to supply more fuel without payments made upfront in cash.
The finance ministry has paid out Rs222 billion power subsidies so far this fiscal year, said Masood. The finance ministry has been urging the water and power ministry to crack down on electricity theft so that the circular debt problem can end once and for all.
Sources told The Express Tribune that another reason for the supply crunch was Finance Minister Ishaq Dar’s refusal to allow state-owned PSO to buy US dollars to make oil payments to its international supplies in December, because doing so would have reduced the country’s foreign exchange reserves below the $15 billion mark the minister was targeting.
Despite hearing that the drop in oil prices was at least partially responsible for the sudden supply shortage, the Senate finance committee passed a resolution demanding that the government reduce domestic oil prices even further, to fully match the global price drop.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 17th, 2015.
COMMENTS (31)
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This nation has no right to get themselves facilitate with the petroleum price drop so the government has taken the step of vanishing the petrol from the country...... Well done government...
@Fazal Dad: Too bad nukes ain't helping.
No gas; no electricity; no petrol; no laws; no security.
@Asif: Actually the shortage is at government run PSO stations while the private sector is unaffected:
http://tribune.com.pk/story/823628/a-tale-of-two-energy-supply-chains
I see Indians have all the time in the world to comment on our issues. Do they have enough time to see what is happening in Indian occupied Kashmir?
@Badsha:
Some people never learn. This joke of a govt. cant pin this on IK, let alone some random commentor in internet. I hope you are enjoying this new patrol starving Pakistan created by your lord Nawaz, who is more than willing to leave you and supporters in life of ruin and run themselves and their kids out of country to live in SA's or UK's palaces.
Pakistanis ruin themselves always by the hands of a few ignorant ones.
Its an old story..... You deliberately create a shortage.....then under the head of a ' national emergency ' funds are released to purchase the commodity AT AN INCREASED PRICE ( those involved pocket the difference ). Some minor officials will be suspended to be later reinstated and the public told that a national crisis was averted.
is this the Domino effect. When is PIA shutting office.
Dear Readers, They are all colluded. The petroleum mafia and the Government paid for the petroleum when it was sky high. They don't want to see lower profit so the next best thing to do is what they do with other commodity ... create artificial scarcity and hence higher profit. They do the same thing with wheat, sugar etc. If people buy this circus in the media staged by media and politicians then the people deserves for what is happening to them People need to be out in the street and this Government will not back-off until demonstration turns violent and they see Government being almost to the point of overthrown. Unfortunately.
@Gp65: Dear Indian friend: See you need to understand dynamics in context of Pakistani businessman mentality who are also politicians. They are averse to hearing cut in their profits. When the petroleum price fell throughout the World these cockroaches did not want to see loss for the petroleum that they paid higher prices. For them they don't want to take a risk or for that matter any risk. Now what they will try to do is create artificial scarcity so that they can keep oil prices arbitrary high. This can end in only one way ....people in the street.
@AVMPolpot: Get lost you Indian cheap shot.
The stock brokers know how to average the value of their stocks even if it is going down by buying more at a reduced price. Is the Finance Minister and the others not aware of the fact that they need to figure in the pent up demand for petrol as a hick-up in the consumption patterns of people and it shall balance out.
The crude shall go towards a sensible price of $30 a barrel in due course of time. Saudi Arabia wont have the funds to keep PML N in power as no more $1.5 would be coming from the Holy father of Saudi Arabia to do their bidding against Iran. Let every outside force fight their own wars - uncouple your self from these countries if you want to survive. As long as you are fighting someone elses proxy war - Pakistan would always be at the mercy of others.
Pakistan must be self sustaining in balancing their budget and not rely on handouts of the Saudis, Qataris, IMF, ADB, and the West. It is shameful that Pakistan politicians use the countries that they protest against as a line item to balance their budget. When would the Pakistani Qom rise up - It is time..
Too bad the dharna finished, now pmln can't even blame it on the dharna :(
We didn't see Maryam's tweet on petrol crisis. Her Daddy ran away when the crisis emerged. Her uncle was 'gracious' enough to take "notice". By the way this notice crap should stop. Our electronic media is very fond of this.
Its all Imran Khan's Fault!
nation being mentally prepared for upcoming LPG bought at jacked up rates from Qatar.
on for a week. I cannot see how it can be resolved in a week uless Saudi Arabia steps in once more and sends oil on credit which is not available at least through the banking system. No wonder Nawaz Sharif has rushed to Saudi Arabia to ask after the health of the king.
This is a financial crisis not an energy crisis. Without proper diagnosis, a proper, lasting resolution is simply not possible.
Ah that explains the inflated value of the rupee. Trying to keep the rupee artificially high is leading to higher current account deficits and now shortages of imported commodities. Excellent work! Run the economy into the ground!
What Petrol problem? We have enough money to make nuclear bombs. Who needs petrol?
The government can blame the oil companies much as they like but ultimately the buck stops with the government/regulator. The excuse of unprecedented demand does not exonerate anyone. The price if oil/fuel has been dropping for months now in the international market - pakistan is no exception - and if you don't figure that will increase demand then either you are a fool or incompetent!
There is an excellent article in Dawn by Khurram Hussain on this issue which makes it very clear that these issues have been festering for years and have now come o a head. To try and explain it away tactically in terms of high tide on one day or the recent drop in fuel prices is missing the woods for the trees.
we all know how these mafia work. They will create an artificial shortage (like sugar, wheat in the past), then double the pricing to take advantage. As petrol is a basic need, people will have no choice but to buy at a higher cost.
This government is a failure!
Petrol crises is due to poor planning....
Govt has permitted all Passengers returning from overseas to carry Petrol instead of Whiskey. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Dutyfree!.
" Petrol crisis: Oil companies, govt trade accusations of culpability" +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++= This is obviously an Indian conspiracy to tarnish Pakistans image.
Naya Pollution Free Pakistan ++++++++++++++++++++ Pakistan Zindabad.
Total management failure and corruption of officials; why price reduction did not cause fuel shortage in other countries?
Will, capacity and integrity of both the government and the oil companies are under question. I doubt both parties on all three aspects.
Everyone who voted for pmln should be sent to the back of the petrol queue! :)
The demand increased because CNG was turned off in Punjab and KPK. This would have been easy to predict.
PSO not being funded in a timely manner led to this crisis. The petroleum minister and finance minister are responsible. All the other gobledygook is illogical. As an Indian reading Dawn and ET regularly I was aware of tis approaching crunch more than a week back. How cold the concerned ministers have been unaware?