FM : West Asia Crisis Not a Diplomatic Issue, Will Lead to Higher Fuel Costs For Common Man

Fourth fuel price hike in 11 days adds ₹7.50/litre cumulative since May 15; government protecting MSMEs, exporters amid 80-day crisis

FM : West Asia Crisis Not a Diplomatic Issue, Will Lead to Higher Fuel Costs For Common Man
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  • Petrol up ₹2.61/litre, diesel ₹2.71/litre (fourth hike in 11 days); ₹7.50/litre cumulative increase since May 15 from global crude costs

  • Govt sacrificed ₹1 lakh crore revenue cutting excise duties; crisis causes higher fuel costs, delayed cargo, costlier shipping, input shortages, working capital pressure

  • Govt protecting citizens, MSMEs, exporters; simplified customs to reroute/store/trans-ship stranded cargo, maintain supply chains and economic stability

Hours after the fourth hike in pump prices for petrol and diesel in 11 days, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Monday said that the crisis in West Asia is not just a geopolitical issue, but it will lead to higher fuel costs for the common people.

Speaking at the 27th foundation day event of Sidbi here, she said the government is sacrificing ₹1 lakh crore of revenue by cutting the excise duties on diesel and petrol.

"The West Asia crisis is not only a diplomatic or geopolitical issue. For businesses and common people, it can mean higher fuel cost, delayed cargo, costlier shipping, shortage of inputs, pressure on working capital and uncertainty in export orders," the finance minister said.

Insurgent Tatas

1 May 2026

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Petrol prices were raised by ₹2.61 a litre and diesel by ₹2.71 on Monday, marking the fourth increase in less than two weeks that extended a delayed pass-through of soaring global crude oil costs triggered by the West Asia conflict.

The latest increase brought cumulative hikes since May 15 to nearly ₹7.50 per litre.

She acknowledged that it is a challenge for the small business units to plan for the future, and also added that the crisis, which has been running for over 80 days now is also a challenge for countries, including India.

The government's approach is focused on protecting citizens, supporting micro, small and medium enterprises, safeguard exporters and keeping supply chains moving and maintaining economic stability, she said.

The minister said the government has taken a series of steps to protect exporters, including the simplifiation of customs formalities, which ensured that enterprises were able to bring back cargo, reroute them or store and trans-ship the stranded cargo.

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