Fuel charges in India: Petrol and diesel costs at this time on November 18. (Representative picture)
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Petrol, Diesel Prices On November 18: In Chennai, the worth of petrol fell by 23 paise to Rs 102.63 and diesel slipped by 22 paise to Rs 94.24 per litre
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Petrol, and Diesel Prices on November 18: Though crude oil costs on Friday jumped 4 per cent amid US sanctions on some Russian oil shippers, petrol and diesel costs in India noticed a slight fall. However, metro cities proceed to have the identical costs for diesel and petrol.
According to authorities oil corporations, in Chennai, the worth of petrol fell by 23 paise to Rs 102.63 and diesel slipped by 22 paise to Rs 94.24 per litre. In Uttar Pradesh’s Gautam Budh Nagar district (Noida-Greater Noida), the worth of petrol stood the identical at Rs 96.79 a litre this morning, whereas diesel continues to be bought at Rs 89.96 a litre. In Chandigarh additionally, the petrol and diesel costs remained unchanged at Rs 96.20 and Rs 84.26 a litre, respectively.
In Lucknow, petrol costs stood at Rs 96.57 a litre and diesel at Rs 89.57. In Gurugram, the worth of petrol stood at Rs 97.18 a litre and diesel at Rs 90.05.
Currently, petrol in Delhi is being bought at Rs 96.72 a litre whereas diesel is being bought at Rs 89.62 a litre. Whereas in Mumbai, petrol is out there at Rs 106.31 and diesel at Rs 94.27 per litre. While petrol in Kolkata is Rs 106.03 and diesel is Rs 92.76 per litre.
In India, oil advertising corporations (OMCs) comparable to Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum decide petrol and diesel costs. This is completed every day, and charges are decided in accordance with the worth of crude oil all through the world.
Crude Oil Prices
Crude oil costs jumped greater than 4 per cent on Friday, rebounding from a 4-month low hit within the earlier session, as traders who had taken quick positions took income and whereas US sanctions on some Russian oil shippers lent help.
Brent crude futures settled up $3.19, or about 4.1%, at $80.61 a barrel, whereas West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI) rose $2.99, or 4.1%, at $75.89.
Some of the losses had been offset after the U.S. imposed sanctions this week on maritime corporations and vessels for delivery Russian oil bought above the Group of Seven’s value cap.
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