Latest News

Sources say that the rise in fuel prices in Tajikistan is due to Ukrainian strikes on Russian refineries.

Sources say that the rise in fuel prices in Tajikistan is due to Ukrainian strikes on Russian refineries.

Three sources from the government of Tajikistan said that the rise in fuel costs in Tajikistan is partly due to Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian oil refineries, they told reporters on Friday.

A source from the anti-monopoly service of the Tajik Government said that there is a shortage of gasoline on the market. This has resulted in higher prices.

Sources said that the source was unable to deliver fuel that had been contracted from Russian producers, citing strikes at Russian refineries which supplied much of Tajikistan’s fuel requirements. Two other sources also agreed.

Monitoring on Friday revealed that fuel prices have risen in the capital of Tajikistan, Dushanbe. This has been happening since October 1. The A-95 has risen by 3.54%. The AI-92 by 3.68%. Diesel by 5.58%. And liquefied petrol gas (LPG), by 5.81%.

According to one source, prices are even higher outside of the capital.

Tajikistan, a mountainous nation of about 10.5 million people, has few hydrocarbon resources of its own. It is therefore economically dependent on Russia, to which many of its citizens are sent for work.

Since 2022, the war in Ukraine by Russia has had a devastating impact on all five former Soviet republics of Central Asia, whose economies have a close relationship with Russia.

In recent weeks, an escalating Ukrainian campaign against Russian energy infrastructure knocked down up to a quarter of Moscow's refinery capacity. This had a ripple affect in Central Asia.

The strike at Russia's Orenburg plant last week, which processes the gas from Kazakhstan Karachaganak, has drastically reduced the capacity of this plant, the largest in the world. Last week, Kazakhstan frozen fuel prices and utility rates, blaming the fallout of the Ukraine war. Kyrgyzstan officials warned on Wednesday that fuel prices may increase up to 15% due to the shortage. (Reporting and Writing by Felix Light; Editing by Hugh Lawson).

(source: Reuters)