The oil marketing companies kept the retail prices of petrol and diesel unchanged on Friday, after touching new highs on the previous day.
Accordingly, the price of petrol continues to remain at Thursday's level of Rs 101.54 a litre and diesel Rs 89.87 per litre in Delhi.
In Mumbai, the price of petrol was held unchanged at an all-time high of Rs 107.54 per litre. Diesel price also continues to be at Rs 97.45 a litre, the highest among metros.
In Chennai, petrol is priced at Rs 102.23 per litre while the price of diesel is Rs 94.39 per litre. The price of petrol in Kolkata is Rs 101.74 per litre while diesel is sold at Rs 93.02 per litre.
On Thursday, petrol price was hiked by 35 paise per litre and diesel by 15 paise, pushing rates to a new high across the country.
The increase came after rates stayed mute for three days. Petrol price was last hiked on July 12, on a day when diesel rates had seen its first reduction in almost three months.
The increase on Thursday neutralised the 16 paise price cut in diesel on July 12. Prior to that, petrol and diesel prices were last cut on April 15. Thereafter, rate revision took an 18-day pause, coinciding with the peak of electioneering to elect a new government in states like West Bengal.
The revision cycle started soon after results for the state elections were declared. Since May 4, petrol price has been hiked on 40 occasions while diesel rates have gone up 37 times and have been reduced on one occasion.
Domestic fuel rates are benchmarked to international oil prices as India is 85 per cent dependent on imports to meet its oil needs. International rates have surged since last month on a rebound in consumption.
Since taking over as the new oil minister last week, Hardeep Singh Puri has been courting oil-producing nations to convey India's concern over high prices. He spoke to his counterpart in Qatar on July 10, and on Wednesday dialled the UAE Energy Minister.
"Conveyed my desire to work closely with UAE and other friendly countries to bring a sense of calm, predictability and realism among other suppliers in the energy market to make it more affordable for consumers," Puri tweeted after speaking to the UAE Minister Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber.
In 40 hikes since May 4, the price of petrol has risen by Rs 11.14 per litre. During this period, diesel rates have soared by Rs 9.14 a litre in 37 instances of price rise.
Since May last year, petrol price has jumped by Rs 31.95 a litre and diesel by Rs 27.58. The government last year raised excise duty on the two fuels to recoup gains arising from a slump in international oil prices.
As much as 55 per cent of the retail selling price of petrol in Delhi is made up of taxes (Rs 32.90 a litre excise duty collected by the central government and Rs 22.80 VAT levied by the state government). Half of the diesel price is made up of taxes (Rs 31.80 central excise and Rs 13.04 state VAT).
(With inputs from Agencies)