India cuts special excise duties on petrol, diesel


Long queues seen before petrol pumps in Belagavi. FIle

Long queues seen before petrol pumps in Belagavi. FIle
| Photo Credit: The Hindu

 India slashed its special ​excise duties on petrol and diesel, as fuel ‌prices stay volatile with supplies choked by the ​Iran war.

In a government order on ⁠Thursday (March 26, 2026), Union Finance Ministry reduced the special excise duty on petrol to ₹3 ($0.0318) per litre from ₹13 ‌earlier. It also cut the duty on diesel to zero from ₹10.

The ‌U.S.-Israeli war with Iran has led to ‌a ⁠near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which ⁠serves as a conduit for 40% of crude oil imports, hurting shipping and gas supplies.

The Ministry did not say ​how much the ‌duty cuts would cost the government.

Madhavi Arora, an economist at Emkay Global, estimated the annualised fiscal hit to be nearly ₹1.55 trillion. The duty ‌cuts would absorb about 30%-40% of annual ​losses of oil marketing companies on auto fuel at current prices, she added.

India ⁠has been hit hard by volatility in crude prices and disruption in oil and gas supplies, ‌but unlike China it has not moved to ban exports of refined fuels.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his government have stressed that adequate arrangements are in place, including for fertilisers supply for the summer sowing season and for coal ‌to meet the rising demand for electricity.

India, the world’s third-biggest ​oil importer and consumer, meets over 90% of its oil needs through purchases from ⁠overseas.

The South Asian country consumed 33.15 million metric ⁠tons of cooking gas last year, with imports accounting for about 60% of demand. About ‌90% of those imports came from West Asia.