Govt to provide credit for purchase of fuel 
                      The government will provide fuel importers with  a Letter of Credit worth US$200 million for the purchase of sufficient petrol  to meet the nation’s needs, Deputy Prime Minister Dr Sonexay Siphandone told  the National Assembly (NA) on Thursday. 
                        This amount could buy 200  million litres of fuel which would cover the demand for July and August at 100  million litres a month, Dr Sonexay said. 
                      
                      
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                        | Dr  Sonexay Siphandone addresses the National Assembly. | 
                       
                     
                                              The government will continue to  provide foreign currency to importers during the remainder of the year in a bid  to procure sufficient fuel, the DPM said in response to questions raised by  Assembly members about the government’s plans for fuel supply amid the  continuing shortage. 
                        The government has provided  credit despite limited foreign currency reserves. The plunging value of the kip  has placed an added burden on importers struggling to source sufficient foreign  currency to buy much-needed fuel, which must all be imported. 
                        Dr Sonexay said the government  would source foreign currency from companies that export minerals and  agricultural produce, which would be given to fuel importers over the remaining  months of this year. The government has allocated US$60 million for use by fuel  importers in June and the Ministry of Finance recently provided an additional  US$10 million.     
                        From June 1-21, as much as  US$102 million was sourced to pay for imported fuel, which was enough to cover  normal needs and included money sourced from commercial banks. This has enabled  more petrol stations to open, the DPM said. 
                        Laos imports all of its fuel  requirements and on average imports 100-120 million litres of fuel a month. 
                        Prior to the steep price hike,  it cost US$600 to US$700 million to import sufficient quantities of fuel for  one year. But the amount spent has doubled in line with the spiralling price of  fuel on the world market, Dr Sonexay said. 
  “The demand for foreign currency  has also risen sharply, so sourcing sufficient foreign currency to buy fuel is  difficult,” he told Assembly members. 
                        Laos currently buys fuel from Vietnam,  Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore. 
                        The government is looking at  ways to diversify the sources of the fuel it imports so that the load is spread  and disruption to one source would not cause a crisis, the DPM said.  
                        In the longer term, the  government will consider ways to promote investment in oil refinery plants in  Laos where crude oil could be refined to ensure fuel security. There are  currently no such plants operational in the country. 
                        Dr Sonexay pledged that authorities in charge would  take action against individuals who manipulate exchange rates unlawfully for  personal gain after learning that the disparity between exchange rates offered  by commercial banks and some currency exchange units was inappropriately large. 
                      Some currency exchange units that were found to be in  breach of the regulations have had their licence revoked, the DPM said. 
                       
                       
By Souksakhone Vaenkeo  
                       (Latest Update June 24, 2022) 
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