Dhaka: Bangladesh has raised retail fuel prices for the second time in six weeks, increasing petrol and kerosene prices by 5 taka per litre in a move that could add to inflationary pressures in the import-dependent economy.The new rates, effective from Monday, set petrol at 140 taka ($1.15) per litre and kerosene at 135 taka per litre. Prices of diesel, the country's most widely used fuel, remain unchanged at 115 taka per litre.The Energy Ministry said in a notification that the revised rates were determined in line with changes in international petroleum product prices.Bangladesh introduced an automatic fuel pricing mechanism in 2024, under which domestic fuel prices are periodically adjusted based on international fuel prices, exchange rate movements, and import costs. The latest increase follows a fuel price hike in April after the war in Iran drove up global oil prices, raising the South Asian nation's import costs.Higher fuel prices are expected to feed into transport and food costs, adding to inflationary pressures already facing consumers.
Bangladesh raises fuel prices again as global costs bite
Bangladesh has increased petrol and kerosene prices for the second time in six weeks. This move is expected to fuel inflation in the nation. The new rates are effective from Monday. Petrol now costs 140 taka per litre and kerosene 135 taka per litre. Diesel prices remain unchanged. The government cites international petroleum product price changes for the revision.
Bangladesh raised petrol and kerosene prices by 5 taka/litre (to 140 and 135 taka respectively), the second hike in six weeks, under its 2024 automatic pricing mechanism tied to global oil markets. For supply-chain and logistics managers with Bangladesh exposure, upstream cost pressure on transport and food signals margin compression and potential vendor renegotiations in the near term.







