Friday, January 09, 2026 | 11:00 PM ISTहिंदी में पढें
Business Standard
Notification Icon
userprofile IconSearch

Budget: Oil & gas sector seeks GST relief, LPG under-recovery compensation

The upstream sector wants a reduction in cess on crude oil, restoration of tax holidays for new blocks and exemption of exploration activities from GST

Russia’s state-owned oil firm Rosneft has agreed to supply up to 500,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil to Indian upstream oil and gas major Reliance Industries (RIL) in the largest-ever energy deal between the two countries, Reuters reported on
premium

The industry has also asked the government to lower GST rates or exemptions for pipeline construction materials, CNG, and biogas

Shubhangi Mathur New Delhi

Listen to This Article

The oil and gas industry expects the upcoming Union Budget to address compensation for underrecoveries on the sale of cooking gas cylinders and provide goods and services tax (GST) relief for exploration activities, say experts. 
The oil-marketing companies (OMCs) are likely to seek compensation for under-recovery on the sale of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) cylinders, which is expected to be around ₹30,000 crore on LPG (domestic) sales, after adjusting for the one-time grant announced in August 2025, said Prashant Vashisht, senior vice-president and co-group head, corporate ratings at Icra. 
The sector wants a reduction in cess on crude oil, restoration of tax holidays for new blocks and exemption of exploration activities from GST, said Vashisht. The industry has also asked the government to lower GST rates or exemptions for pipeline construction materials, CNG, and biogas. 
“The midstream industry is requesting the removal of the 2.5 per cent Customs Duty on LNG imports to make natural gas more widely used as a fuel. The industry incumbents also want natural gas and petroleum products to be included under GST to enable free flow of tax credits,” said Icra.
 
Consultancy firm Deloitte, in its budget expectations, said the government should allow Inverted Duty Structure (IDS) refund of accumulated GST input tax credit (ITC) on input services received for operating expenditure for compressed biogas (CBG) plants.
 
The current refund framework limits IDS refunds to ITC on inputs, excluding input services. This creates structural inefficiencies and financial strain for businesses where services form a major part of operational costs, Deloitte added.
 
“It will alleviate working capital pressures, especially for businesses in the production of CBG plants with high service-related operating expenditure, improve GST credit efficiency and support overall cost competitiveness across industries.”