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Pakistan'da LPG İthalatçıları İki-Üç Güne Ciddi Gaz Sıkıntısı Uyarısı Yaptı

Summary · AI generated

LPG İthalatçıları Birliği (LPGIAP), hükümet acil müdahale etmezse önümüzdeki iki ila üç gün içinde ülke çapında ciddi bir sıvılaştırılmış petrol gazı (LPG) sıkıntısı yaşanacağı uyarısında bulundu. Birlik Başkanı Şeyh Mukarrem Vahid, Petrol Bakanı Ali Perviz Malik'e gönderdiği mektupta sorunun ivedilikle çözülmemesi halinde arz krizinin kaçınılmaz olduğunu vurguladı. Pakistan'da LPG, özellikle kış aylarında evsel ve ticari tüketimde doğal gaz alternatifi olarak kritik öneme sahip. Beklenen sıkıntı, piyasada fiyat artışlarına ve dağıtım kesintilerine yol açabilir. LPGIAP'ın çağrısı, ithalatçıların mevcut fiyatlandırma mekanizmasından memnuniyetsizliğine işaret ediyor. Birlik ayrıca, uzun vadeli istikrar için "sürdürülebilir" bir fiyatlandırma çerçevesi talep ediyor. Bu talep, sektördeki yapısal sorunlara dikkat çekiyor. Hükümetin nasıl bir adım atacağı henüz bilinmezken, kısa vadede müdahale edilmemesi durumunda enerji tedarikinde aksamalar öngörülüyor.

This summary is currently in Turkish; automated English translation is coming soon.

Started 12 Jul, 17:39 1 events Updated 4h ago
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latest: 4h ago
  1. Economic12 Jul, 17:39

    LPG importers association warns of serious gas shortage in next few days, seeks 'sustainable' pricing framework

    ISLAMABAD: The LPG Importers Association of Pakistan (LPGIAP) on Sunday warned of a “serious” nationwide shortage of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) in the next two to three days if the government did not immediately intervene. In a letter to Petroleum Minister Ali Pervaiz Malik, LPGIAP Chairman Sheikh Mukarram Waheed warned that unless the issue was resolved without delay, the country’s LPG supply chain could face “significant disruptions”. He called for an emergency meeting of all relevant stakeholders to address serious concerns over the current LPG pricing mechanism. “The LPG price notified by the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (Ogra) on June 30, 2026, does not accurately reflect the actual landed cost of imported LPG,” the letter read. It emphasised that the “international prices, freight charges, exchange rate fluctuations, port handling fees, inland transportation, financing costs and other operational expenses” had pushed import costs “well above the notified selling price, leaving importers to absorb heavy financial losses on every cargo”. The letter stated that several importers and storage operators had already reduced or suspended their operations due to mounting losses. “If the existing pricing mechanism remains unchanged, more import terminals and LPG facilities may be forced to shut down, threatening uninterrupted supplies across the country,” it cautioned. The letter urged the government to treat the matter as a national priority and convene an emergency meeting to develop a “transparent, practical and sustainable” pricing framework that reflects the actual cost of imported LPG. “Prompt government action is essential to safeguard the country’s energy security, maintain market stability and prevent hardship for millions of households, commercial users and industries that depend on LPG as a primary source of fuel,” it concluded. Ogra had reduced the consumer price of LPG by Rs67.33 per kg for July, fixing the official rate at Rs241.43 per kg from July 1. The authority also reduced the price of an 11.8kg domestic cylinder by Rs794.05 to Rs2,848.91 after a decline in international LPG prices. However, LPG retailers and consumers in Lahore, Multan and Muzaffargarh suggest that the official reduction has not translated into market relief, with LPG being sold for between Rs480 and Rs550 per kg. LPG prices have previously reached a peak of Rs480, while its price ahead of the Middle East crisis was between Rs260 and Rs280 per kg.

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