The
ministry is trialing a state tender for 150,000 tonnes of 95
octane gasoline and has received offers from two companies.
The tender, which aims to supply around 10% of the country's
needs, is a first in import-dependent Lebanon, where private
companies usually procure fuel.
Gas stations suspended a strike on Friday to hold talks with
authorities, after shutting down across the country and
complaining of losses from buying dollars on the black market.
Caretaker Energy Minister Nada Boustani has said private buyers
recently sought to hike petrol pump prices to compensate for the
rising cost of dollars on the parallel market, now the main
source of hard currency.
The country's economic crisis has been long in the making and
now come to a head. The Lebanese pound has slumped as much as
40% below the official dollar peg rate in recent days on the
parallel market and a hard currency crunch has left many
importers unable to bring in goods, forcing up prices.
Since protests erupted on Oct. 17 and with political gridlock
over forming a new government, pressure has piled on the
financial system. Banks have curbed U.S. dollar withdrawals and
blocked nearly all transfers abroad.
The central bank said in September it would prioritize foreign
currency reserves for fuel, medicine and wheat, though buyers
must still supply 15% of their dollar needs.
Fuel imports had since resumed, but traders were asking for 100%
of the bill in U.S. dollars to keep buying.
Boustani said on Monday she hoped the central bank would
re-evaluate its plan to deal with the ministry under the same
mechanism that covers 85% of the dollar need for importing fuel,
rather than all of it.
"We took the decision (to postpone) to guarantee more
competition and get the best prices for the Lebanese state," she
told a press conference.
(Reporting by Ellen Francis; Editing by Alison Williams, Kirsten
Donovan and Giles Elgood)
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