MOSCOW (MRC) -- India’s fuel consumption in October registered its first year-on-year increase since February, as slowing coronavirus cases and increased mobility accelerated an economic recovery, reported Reuters.
Consumption of refined fuels, a proxy for oil demand, rose 2.5% in October from the prior year to 17.78 million tons and nearly 15% higher from the previous month, data from the Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell (PPAC) of the Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas showed.
“GST (Goods and Services Tax) collections, power demand, PMI etc all are indicating increased economic activity and COVID cases are also coming down to a point where demand is coming back to normalcy,” said K Ravichandran, senior vice president at ICRA, a unit of Moody’s Investors Service.
With public transportation gradually picking up, fuel demand is expected to improve further, he added.
India's fuel consumption rises for 2nd straight month.
India’s daily COVID-19 case count has steadily declined since September, although total cases remain north of 8.5 million- the second highest in the world.
Activity in India’s dominant services industry also expanded for the first time in eight months in October as demand surged.
Diesel consumption, a key parameter linked to economic growth and which accounts for about 40% of overall refined fuel sales in India, rose 7.4% to 6.99 million tons on an annual basis, and climbed about 27% month-on-month.
Sales of gasoline, or petrol, rose by 4.3% from a year earlier to 2.65 million tons, and by 8.2% from 2.45 million tons from September.
Cooking gas or liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) sales increased by 3% to 2.42 million tons from a year earlier and 6.6% from the previous month, while naphtha sales rose 15% to 1.30 million tons and about 14% month-on-month.
Sales of bitumen, used for making roads, rose about 47% versus last year, and fuel oil increased by about 12.8% last month.
As MRC informed previously, India’s top refiner Indian Oil Corp has been operating at 100% capacity since early November as local fuel demand has recovered.
We remind that IOC is expanding its petrochemical capacity by more than 70 per cent from its current 3.2 million tonnes a year. It is also on new technologies that reduces the cost of producing petrochemicals.
Ethylene and propylene are feedstocks for producing PE and polypropylene (PP).
According to MRC's ScanPlast report, Russia's estimated PE consumption totalled 1,594,510 tonnes in the first nine months of 2020, up by 1% year on year. Only high denstiy polyethylene (HDPE) shipments increased. At the same time, PP shipments to the Russian market reached 880,130 tonnes in the nine months of 2020 (calculated using the formula: production minus exports plus imports, exluding producers' inventories as of 1 January, 2020). Supply increased exclusively of PP random copolymer.
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