Compressed natural gas or CNG sold to automobiles and natural gas piped to household kitchens will be the first fuel where consumer will get invoices providing break-up of price. Presently, no break-up of price of petrol, diesel, LPG or kerosene is provided to consumers.
Moily had earlier this month rejigged supplies to ensure that city gas companies got cheaper domestic gas to meet all of their requirements for CNG and piped natural gas (PNG) supplied to households for cooking purposes compared with the previous limit of 80% for most states.
This led to a steep Rs 14.90 per kg cut in price of compressed natural gas or CNG and Rs 5 per kg reduction in rates of cooking gas piped into kitchens in Delhi.
Similar cuts in rates were expected in all states, except Maharashtra and Haryana, as city gas distributors stop buying higher-priced LNG and shift entirely to domestic gas. Not all benefits, however, has been passed on consumers in some places.
Now, Moily has ordered all city gas distribution (CGD) firms to "display break-up of CNG price at CNG stations" as well as "furnish the break-up of PNG price in invoice to the customer."
"The (CGD) entities would give following details in the break-up of CNG and PNG price: Cost of gas to the CGD entity, supply and distribution cost of CGD entity, company's margin, excise, VAT and any other tax," the Oil Ministry said in an order, issued with Moily's approval, yesterday.
All CGD companies have been asked to furnish the break-up of CNG and PNG price to the Ministry on annual basis by April 30 each year, the order said, adding that the data for 2013-14 should be furnished by April 30, 2014.
"Non-compliance of the guidelines by CGD entities would lead to cancellation of their domestic gas allocation for CNG and PNG," it said.
The companies will have to furnish to the Ministry complete break-up of cost of gas they receive at the entry point, their supply and distribution cost (indicating further break-up of all costs with auditable back-up details), company's margin, excise, VAT and any other tax.
The order said the Ministry was of the view that in order to ensure that the benefit of allocation of domestic gas to CGD entities is passed on to the end consumers and for transparency in pricing, the break-up of CNG and PNG prices need to be disclosed to the consumers.
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