
ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Petroleum Ali Pervaiz Malik convened a high-level meeting on Saturday with key industry stakeholders to discuss the government’s transition from weekly to daily petroleum price adjustments, which officials say will bring greater transparency, sharpen market competition, and deliver fairer, market-driven prices for consumers.
The session brought together representatives from the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA), the Oil Companies Advisory Council (OCAC), the Oil Marketing Association of Pakistan (OMAP), refineries, oil marketing companies, and senior officials from the Petroleum Division.
Reform aims to cut political role in pricing
Minister Malik told participants that the reform stems directly from a directive by the prime minister and has already secured approval from the federal cabinet, forming part of a broader push to build a rules-based petroleum pricing system in Pakistan.
Going forward, retail fuel prices will be set through a transparent, formula-driven process anchored in market fundamentals, cutting down on political interference and insulating consumers from sudden, distorted price swings.
According to Malik, moving to daily pricing marks a fundamental break from the old weekly announcement cycle and the requirement for mandatory government sign-off, pushing the sector toward a more competitive, market-driven model.
He argued that the new approach will help curb market abuse and close off opportunities for windfall profits, while improving transparency and fairness for everyday consumers.
Officials described the shift as a core piece of a phased deregulation strategy intended to steadily reduce state involvement, letting market forces set fuel prices much the way exchange rates move daily.
Regulators prepare systems for transition
Behind the scenes, the Petroleum Division is working with OGRA and industry stakeholders to finalize comprehensive standard operating procedures that will guide the transition.
OGRA, for its part, told the meeting it has already aligned its internal systems for the new regime and is upgrading its data dissemination infrastructure so daily petroleum price information can be published for public transparency.
Participants also reviewed operational concerns tied to supply chain logistics, inventory management, and access to real-time data. The government pledged full support in resolving these operational hurdles and confirmed that a dedicated committee has been set up to oversee the transition and settle implementation issues by consensus.
Malik emphasized that OGRA, district administrations, oil marketing companies, dealers, OCAC, and OMAP all have a part to play in making the reform succeed, while acknowledging that major changes of this scale rarely come without friction.
Industry welcomes move, urges more clarity
The reform has drawn a broadly positive response from industry bodies. OCAC welcomed the decision, saying it expects consumers to benefit over time from greater choice, better service standards, and market-driven pricing in a more competitive landscape.
The council called the move a step toward a deregulation goal that has been debated for more than two decades, and pledged its full cooperation in helping the government achieve broader sector liberalization.
It also expressed confidence that a well-designed and properly executed deregulation framework would support sustainable growth and modernization in Pakistan’s downstream petroleum sector without compromising consumer protection.
Adil Khattak, CEO of Attock Refinery Limited and Chairperson of the Energy Committee at the Overseas Investors Chamber of Commerce and Industry, echoed the positive sentiment but tempered it with caution.
He described the shift to daily notifications as a sign of the government’s intent to make the market more responsive and to gradually advance deregulation, but stressed that the reform’s success hinges on the strength of the overall regulatory framework, not just how often prices are updated.
Khattak called for the government to share full details of the revised pricing mechanism, implementation roadmap, and standard operating procedures with all stakeholders to guarantee transparency and a level playing field for both public and private players.
He further pointed out that petroleum prices, inventories, and imports remain regulated in various direct and indirect ways, warning that moving from fortnightly to weekly and now daily pricing without tackling these deeper structural issues could actually increase volatility and complicate inventory and cash-flow management for companies.



