Thailand launches push to use more ethanol, gas
By Nopporn Wong-Anan
BANGKOK, May 27 (Reuters) - Thailand passed a tax incentive package on Tuesday to lure motorists and truckers to switch to ethanol or compressed natural gas from gasoline or diesel as the net crude oil importer seeks to counter soaring oil prices.
The package, approved by the cabinet on Tuesday, was moved up by two years from an original schedule as the country sees oil prices pushing up inflation and affecting economic growth, cabinet ministers said.
"We have to speed up the plan as global oil prices have already exceeded our projected price of $120/barrel for this year," Finance Minister Surapong Suebwonglee told reporters.
U.S. crude CLc1 stood at $133.18 a barrel by 0647 GMT, little changed from late electronic trade on Monday but up nearly 40 percent this year, after touching a record high of $135.09 last week.
The incentive plans were estimated to save Thailand, which imports 80 percent of its crude needs, 15 percent of its 700 billion baht ($21.8 billion) annual fuel costs, Energy Minister Poonpirom Liptapanlop told reporters.
After three years of strong sales growth of E10 -- a mix of 10 percent ethanol and 90 percent gasoline, Thailand would launch E85 -- a 85:15 mix of ethanol and gasoline, in October, she said.
The cabinet agreed to lower the excise tax for imported cars that use both E85 and gasoline as two state-run oil firms -- PTT PCL PTT.BK and Bangchak Petroleum BCP.BK -- vowed to start selling the fuel at 50 service stations by October, Poonpirom said.
"It should be popular very quickly as it will be 10 baht (31 U.S cents) per litre cheaper than the premium gasoline," she told a state run television on Monday. Continued...

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