ISLAMABAD: Every time Brent crude jumps, Pakistan’s social media fills with predictions about the next petrol hike. The instinct is understandable. As global oil prices surge and Brent crude becomes the most widely shared indicator on social media, confusion has emerged over how petroleum prices are actually determined in Pakistan.
Since Brent is one of the world’s most visible oil benchmarks it is a powerful shorthand for geopolitical risk. But it is also an incomplete guide to what Pakistani consumers actually pay at the pump. In Pakistan, petrol and diesel are not priced by simply taking Brent crude and converting it into rupees per litre. The country’s pricing system is far more specific, and far more regional.
To see why, it helps to separate three things that are often collapsed into one. Crude benchmarks, refined-product benchmarks, and domestic price build-up. Brent is a crude benchmark anchored in the North Sea and used across financial markets and physical contracts as a global reference point. It is more commonly used as a benchmark for Europe and parts of the Atlantic Basin.
Pakistan’s crude exposure is more closely tied to the Gulf than to the North Sea. For Asian buyers of Middle Eastern oil, Dubai-linked pricing is often the more relevant crude reference. That is why disruptions in or around the Gulf can drive a wedge between what Brent is doing on television screens and what Asian importers are actually facing in cargo premiums, freight and availability.
Reuters reported last week that the premium on benchmark Dubai crude had surged amid conflict-related disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, underlining how sharply regional supply conditions can diverge from the cleaner story told by Brent alone. In other words, Brent may set the mood, but Dubai and Gulf cargo economics often shape the bill.
In recent trading, Dubai crude closed at around $134.4 per barrel on a Free on Board (FOB) basis. However, this price does not reflect the actual cost paid by importing countries such as Pakistan.
Once premium charges, marine insurance, freight costs, and other logistics expenses are added, the landed cost of crude oil rises to roughly $144 per barrel.
But more importantly, Pakistan’s retail petrol and diesel prices are not determined directly from crude oil prices even if it is the gulf price.
The country follows a regulated petroleum pricing framework under which domestic fuel prices are calculated using international benchmarks for refined petroleum products rather than crude.
These benchmarks are published by S&P Global Commodity Insights through its widely used Platts Oil Pricing Benchmarks. The price calculation has historically relied on average Arab Gulf FOB prices published in the Platts Oilgram, not on Brent or WTI.
Under this mechanism, the government determines local fuel prices based on the average international price of petrol and diesel during the relevant pricing period, typically covering a set number of days before the official price announcement.
Currently, international market indicators suggest that petrol is trading around $120 per barrel, while diesel prices are significantly higher at roughly $170 per barrel in global product markets.
These refined product prices form the core basis for Pakistan’s fuel pricing calculations. Additional components, including freight costs, exchange rate adjustments, inland transportation margins, dealer commissions, and government taxes, are then incorporated to determine the final retail price.
Because Brent crude is the most widely reported global oil benchmark, it often dominates international news coverage and social media discussions.
However, using Brent alone to interpret Pakistan’s fuel prices can lead to misleading conclusions, as the country’s pricing formula is tied to regional crude benchmarks and refined product prices rather than a single global crude indicator.
That is also why two people can both be “right” and still be talking about different things. Someone watching Brent is not necessarily wrong: Brent still matters because it influences global sentiment, arbitrage, hedging costs and, at times, the broader structure of oil pricing. But someone trying to forecast the next Pakistani petrol or diesel revision needs to look past Brent to the relevant Gulf product assessments, PSO premiums, freight, insurance, exchange-rate movements and the tax-and-margin stack inside OGRA’s formula.
Recent reporting suggests the government has now moved toward even more frequent reviews, using a five-day average of Gulf Arab Platts assessments for the relevant product, precisely because volatile regional markets were making slower revisions harder to manage.
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