The state-run company has booked an inventory loss of Rs 1,400 crore during the quarter. The city-headquartered oil refiner and marketer had earned USD 2.12 on turning every barrel of crude oil into products in the year ago period, which had helped it report more than double its net income to Rs 850.31 crore.
During the reporting period its net sales declined to Rs 42,003.57 crore from Rs 51,803.26 crore, she said, adding expenses declined to Rs 42,672.93 crore from Rs 49,491 crore.
The finance cost also increased to Rs 165.03 crore from Rs 122.74 crore, as its long-term borrowings rose to Rs 15,405.53 crore from Rs 14,855.83 crore a year ago, while tax expenses came down massively to Rs 149.85 crore from Rs 832.38 crore during the quarter.
The state-run company's under-recovery stood at Rs 552 crore during the quarter but it got back Rs 550 crore of that from the government by way of subsidy reimbursements.
Vasudeva said the board has approved the Rs 4,200 crore expansion plan of the Mumbai Refinery, which will increase its refining capacity to 9.5 million tonne from 6.5 million now, which will help it become compliant by 2020 to offer BS IV/V diesel and petrol.
The company has invested Rs 280 crore capital into the national crude reserves cavern in Vishakapatnam, which is under operations now. This investment has taken the company's crude storage capacity to 330 tmt.
She said to date, out of its 48 million LPG customers 1.28 million have given up their subsidies, while the industry as a whole has seen 4.52 million customers. The company imports 30 per cent of LPG demand.
