In a direct response to the global energy shock caused by the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, the Indian government has initiated plans to establish a Price Stabilization Fund (PSF) for gasoline, diesel, and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG).
The proposal, which is being finalized by the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas in coordination with the Ministry of Finance, aims to create a fiscal buffer that can absorb sudden global price spikes, preventing them from being passed on to your wallet at the pump.
1. How the Fund Will Work
This mechanism is inspired by the agricultural Price Stabilization Fund launched in 2015 to manage the prices of pulses and onions.
- The “Buffer” Strategy: The government plans to team up with Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs) like IOCL, BPCL, and HPCL to build dedicated fuel reserves. These reserves will be “released” into the market during supply crunches to keep domestic rates steady.
- Funding Structure: Early discussions suggest an initial corpus of approximately ₹57,380 crore (under a broader Economic Stabilisation framework) to provide the necessary “fiscal headroom.”
- Threshold Triggers: The fund will likely be activated when global crude prices or volatility indicators cross a predefined “danger zone”—currently a major concern with Brent trading near $103/barrel.
2. Current Market Context (April 2026)
The move comes at a critical time as India faces a massive $70 billion annual increase in its oil import bill due to the West Asia conflict.
| Fuel Type | Status (April 13–15, 2026) | Market Action |
| Petrol | ₹94.77/L (Delhi) | Prices frozen despite $100+ oil. |
| Diesel | ₹87.67/L (Delhi) | Export duty hiked to ₹55.5/L to protect domestic supply. |
| ATF (Jet Fuel) | ₹2.07 Lakh/KL | Prices doubled; export duty hiked to ₹42/L. |
| LPG | Stable (Domestic) | Commercial rates rose by ₹195.50 this month. |
- The “Freeze” Strategy: To protect consumers, OMCs are currently incurring significant under-recoveries (losses), estimated at ₹18/litre on petrol and ₹35/litre on diesel. The new fund is designed to compensate for these losses without draining the central budget in a reactionary way.
3. Difference Between PSF and Strategic Reserves
It is important to note that this new fund is distinct from India’s existing Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR):
- SPR (Physical Security): Giant underground salt caverns (like those in Visakhapatnam and Mangalore) designed to hold crude oil for supply security during a total war or 90-day disruption.
- PSF (Price Management): A financial and refined-product buffer designed for direct market intervention to keep retail prices affordable for the common citizen.
4. Why This Matters for You
Since you have been monitoring Indian market regulations and the ₹1,500 crore Rainmatter investments, this policy shift signals a move toward “Sovereign Self-Reliance”:
- Inflation Control: By capping fuel price volatility, the government aims to keep the retail inflation (currently 3.4%) from spiraling, which in turn supports the stable interest rate environment that startups and investors rely on.
- OMC Stability: For investors in oil marketing companies, the fund provides a clearer roadmap for how they will be reimbursed for “social service” during energy crises, potentially making their stocks more predictable.
“We are not looking to subsidize fuel forever; we are looking to smoothen the peaks so that a one-week blockade in the Gulf doesn’t break a household’s monthly budget,” a government source noted.
