RLNG price raised by Rs109 per mmbtu for Feb
ISLAMABAD: The Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (Ogra) on Monday notified the revised tariff of Regasified Liquefied Natural Gas (RLNG) for the SSGC and SNGPL for the current month. It shows that the RLNG price has been hiked by Rs109 per mmbtu and Punjab and Islamabad will get costly RLNG.
According to a notification, there is $0.73 per mmbtu increase in the sale price of imported RLNG on the system of Sui Southern Gas Pipelines Company (SSGC) for the month of February as compared to January. The new price of the RLNG for SSGC system has been fixed at $11.1943 per mmbtu, which was $10.4602 during the last month.
Similarly, there is $0.71 per mmbtu surge in the sale price of imported RLNG on the system of Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Company Limited (SNGPL) for the current month as compared to the corresponding month. The new price of the LNG for SNGPL system has been fixed at $11.1975 per mmbtu, which was $10.4822 in January.
-
Nick Jonas Gets Candid About His Type 1 Diabetes Diagnosis -
King Charles Sees Environmental Documentary As Defining Project Of His Reign -
James Van Der Beek Asked Fans To Pay Attention To THIS Symptom Before His Death -
Portugal Joins European Wave Of Social Media Bans For Under-16s -
Margaret Qualley Recalls Early Days Of Acting Career: 'I Was Scared' -
Sir Jackie Stewart’s Son Advocates For Dementia Patients -
Google Docs Rolls Out Gemini Powered Audio Summaries -
Breaking: 2 Dead Several Injured In South Carolina State University Shooting -
China Debuts World’s First AI-powered Earth Observation Satellite For Smart Cities -
Royal Family Desperate To Push Andrew As Far Away As Possible: Expert -
Cruz Beckham Releases New Romantic Track 'For Your Love' -
5 Celebrities You Didn't Know Have Experienced Depression -
Trump Considers Scaling Back Trade Levies On Steel, Aluminium In Response To Rising Costs -
Claude AI Shutdown Simulation Sparks Fresh AI Safety Concerns -
King Charles Vows Not To Let Andrew Scandal Overshadow His Special Project -
Spotify Says Its Best Engineers No Longer Write Code As AI Takes Over