South Korean officials announce expanded 25% tax cuts on LPG butane amid Middle East crisis.
South Korean officials announce expanded 25% tax cuts on LPG butane amid Middle East crisis.
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Government to expand LPG butane tax cuts to 25 percent next month

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The South Korean government announced on Thursday it will expand tax cuts on liquefied petroleum gas butane products from 10 percent to 25 percent starting next month through June. The measure aims to mitigate the domestic impact of international price surges due to the Middle Eastern crisis. The Fair Trade Commission plans stronger penalties for repeated collusion cases.

The Ministry of Finance and Economy made the decision as the impact of international LPG price hikes, driven by the Middle Eastern crisis, is expected domestically from May. International butane prices jumped nearly 50 percent to an average of $800 per ton this month from $540 per ton in March. Butane users are mostly low-income groups.

Late last month, the government more than doubled tax cuts on gasoline from 7 percent to 15 percent and on diesel from 10 percent to 25 percent through the end of May. An intergovernmental inspection team nabbed 99 cases of petroleum business law violations, including false reporting and hoarding, at more than 5,700 gas stations nationwide.

Consumer price inflation was a modest 2.2 percent in March but is expected to reach the mid-2 percent range or higher in April due to rising fuel prices, the ministry said. It will continue measures to stabilize supplies of key industrial materials like naphtha and urea to minimize the crisis's impact on domestic industries.

The Fair Trade Commission said it will push stronger punitive measures against companies repeatedly involved in collusion, including revocation of registrations and licenses, and business suspensions, especially in industries like construction and real estate requiring approvals. It is reviewing systems to order dismissal or suspension of executives involved, litigation reforms for easier victim compensation, and 100 percent surcharges for repeat offenders within the previous 10 years, up from the current 10 to 80 percent over five years.

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Il governo del presidente Lula ha presentato al Congresso il 23 aprile 2026 un disegno di legge che consente tagli a PIS/Cofins su benzina, etanolo, diesel e biodiesel utilizzando entrate petrolifere straordinarie. La misura risponde a un aumento del 61% dei costi di importazione della benzina causato dalla guerra in Iran, secondo i dati dell'ANP. I funzionari dichiarano che i tagli saranno parziali e temporanei, probabilmente per la durata di due mesi.

The Centre has raised commercial LPG allocation to states and union territories to 70% of pre-crisis levels, prioritising steel, automobiles, textiles and chemicals industries. The move comes amid supply disruptions from the West Asia war's closure of the Strait of Hormuz, enabled by higher domestic production and imports from outside the region.

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The National Petroleum Company reported minor fuel price changes on Wednesday that take effect Thursday, May 7. 93-octane gasoline rises 0.1 pesos per liter and diesel falls 47.3 pesos, while kerosene stays the same.

Following last week's rollbacks, diesel prices are forecast to drop another P17 to P19 per liter and gasoline P2 to P3 per liter starting April 21, potentially taking diesel below P130, as Middle East tensions ease further with a holding ceasefire.

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Finance Minister Jorge Quiroz announced increases of $370 per liter in 93-octane gasoline and $580 in diesel, effective from Thursday, March 26, due to the international oil price surge from the Iran conflict. The government also activated palliative measures, including freezing Transantiago fares until year-end and subsidies for taxi drivers. Quiroz justified the moves as necessary to align local prices with international levels and safeguard public finances.

Prime Minister Kim Min-seok said Wednesday the government will decide whether to extend fuel price caps after a careful review, as the temporary measure expires this week. Introduced in mid-March to counter supply disruptions from the Middle East conflict, the system has shown positive effects despite mixed opinions. Kim made the remarks at a meeting on the crisis's economic impact.

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Despite the government doubling daily allocations of 5-kg LPG cylinders to stabilize supplies disrupted by the West Asia conflict, high upfront costs, low awareness, and inconsistent availability are keeping them out of reach for migrant workers and students. Of the 1,368 cylinders set aside daily, only about 50-55% are being purchased from Oil Marketing Companies.

 

 

 

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