Flaming petrol prices to fuel CNG vehicles adoption: Report

Elevated prices of petrol due to a steep increase in taxes in the recent past is set to increase the adoption of compressed natural gas (CNG)-driven vehicles, Crisil Research said. Accordingly, the last time petrol prices had crossed the Rs 80 per litre mark was in October 2018, when Brent crude had surged to $80.5 per barrel. In contrast, the price has now touched an all-time high of Rs 85.2 per litre in New Delhi even though Brent has slid to $55 per barrel. The increase is due to higher excise duty, which rose by Rs 13 to Rs 32.98 per litre in 2020 and value-added tax. “Tax now accounts for over 60 per cent of the retail selling price of petrol, compared with 47 per cent in 2019,” said Hetal Gandhi, Director, CRISIL Research. “Given that the government has to find the money to ramp up public spending – and is also promoting usage of cleaner fuels – it is unlikely that the tax on petrol will come down to previous levels anytime soon.” In the current fiscal, the government is expected to earn incremental revenue of Rs 1.4 lakh crore because of higher excise duty – despite petrol and diesel sales volume likely declining 10-16 per cent. Besides, in 2021, Crisil Research expects Brent crude to rise 23 per cent on-year to an average $50-55 per barrel from $42.3 per barrel in 2020, riding on a gradual recovery in economic activity globally. “That would mean a 4 per cent increase over the average closing price of December 2020.” “In comparison, domestic gas prices are expected to rise over 20 per cent to $2.5-3.5 per million British thermal unit (mBbtu) in calendar 2021 from $2.45 in 2020.” Furthermore, the percentage increase in domestic gas prices is similar, the differential between petrol and CNG retail prices will remain wide because of higher taxes on the former. Parallelly, the government is ramping up city gas distribution (CGD) networks, which would also drive up CNG consumption. “Within CGD, the CNG segment – accounting for 40 per cent of CGD demand is expected to log a compound annual growth rate of 25 per cent between fiscals 2021 and 2023.” At present, CNG vehicles account for only 5 per cent of the passenger vehicles sold in the country annually. “With the implementation of Bharat Stage VI standards, prices of diesel vehicles have risen sharply, pushing most commercial players towards CNG.” “The price competitiveness of CNG is evident in consumption volumes, which have logged a CAGR of 11 per cent over the past three years.” About 1.8 lakh CNG cars and passenger vehicles were sold last fiscal versus 1.4 lakh in fiscal 2015. “CNG was always cheaper than petrol, but the price differential between the two has widened rapidly in the past two years,” said Mayur Patil, Associate Director, Crisil Research. “Today, the cost of running a CNG car is 44 per cent less than a petrol variant, if you consider the CNG price of Rs 42.7 per kg in New Delhi.” According to report, the ramp up in the share of natural gas in India’s energy mix is expected to take place via the trunk gas pipelines which are being laid, and deeper penetration of the CGD network. “A total of 136 ‘geographical areas’ have been awarded under Rounds 9 and 10 of CGD, which are expected to cover 71 per cent of the cumulative population.” “While growth in CNG vending outlets has more than doubled to 2,434 between 2015 and 2020, it is still significantly fewer than petrol outlets. The expansion of CGD network and increasing adoption of CNG as a fuel for personal vehicles will ensure this number increases faster than before.”

Global gas demand likely to grow by 2.8 per cent this year: IEA

Global gas demand is expected to grow by 2.8% this year, or about 110 billion cubic metres (bcm), recovering towards 2019 levels, a senior analyst from the International Energy Agency (IEA) said at the European Gas conference on Tuesday. Global gas markets posted their largest drop on record last year, with consumption falling by an estimated 100 bcm as milder weather at the start of the year and the COVID-19 pandemic slammed energy demand, the IEA’s senior natural gas analyst Jean-Baptiste Dubreuil told the virtual conference. Still, gas demand proved more resilient than that for other energy sources such as oil, he added. Record low LNG spot prices due to the pandemic have rebounded to record highs this year, supported by freezing temperatures and supply issues. “Natural gas demand is more temperature sensitive than other fuels,” said Dubreuil. He added that while global gas demand is expected to recover this year, no major rebound is expected and more mature markets will see only a gradual recovery, with some still not returning to their 2019 levels. He also said he expected new opportunities and challenges against a backdrop of uncertain medium-term LNG demand, with about one third of active LNG contracts due to expire by 2025, while liquefaction capacity is set to grow by 20%, quadrupling the amount of current uncontracted volumes.