India douses fears of retail fuel price hike amid panic buying

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 U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Ahmedabad, India, March 23, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)

NEW DELHI, April 28 (Reuters) – India has asked motorists to avoid panic buying and clarified that there was no proposal to raise ​pump prices for diesel and gasoline, a government official ‌said on Tuesday.

“We have adequate supplies of liquefied petroleum gas, petrol, and diesel. There has been no increase in prices. Please avoid panic buying and do ​not believe rumours,” Sujata Sharma, Joint Secretary in the federal ​oil ministry, said at a news conference on Tuesday ⁠in an appeal to buyers.

India, the world’s third-biggest oil importer and ​consumer, has been hit by rising oil prices triggered by the closure ​of the Strait of Hormuz after the U.S.-Isreli war on Iran.

India’s crude import prices rose to $120 per barrel earlier this month, denting the margins of retailers on ​the sale of gasoline and gasoil, as the higher costs have ​not been factored into the pump prices.

Indian refiners have not raised pump prices ‌of ⁠gasoline and gasoil in four years to shield consumers, despite volatility in global markets.

Analysts at Kotak Institutional Equities in a recent report estimated there was a need to raise the price of a liter of ​gasoline and gasoil ​by 25-28 rupees ⁠after elections in some states end on April 29.

According to estimates by Mumbai-based ICICI Securities, profit after ​tax for these oil retailers likely declined by 82% ​in ⁠the March quarter over a year ago, as crude oil costs soared but retail prices did not move up in tandem.

Reliance Industries, operator of ⁠the ​world’s biggest refining complex and India’s biggest ​company by market value, late last week flagged “unprecedented” supply disruptions and a sharp hit to ​profit in its March-quarter earnings.