Petroleum prices stabilisation fund Pakistan fuel stabilisation fund gets official backing from Finance Ministry

The petroleum prices stabilisation fund is now officially on the books in Pakistan. On June 30, 2026, the Ministry of Finance issued a formal notification creating a new government account for the Petroleum Prices Stabilisation Fund (PPSF), a financial reserve designed to cushion Pakistani consumers against sudden and sharp rises in fuel prices. The move follows months of petrol and diesel price swings that have hit ordinary households hard.

What Is the Petroleum Prices Stabilisation Fund?

The petroleum prices stabilisation fund is not a subsidy in the old sense. It is a financial buffer, a reserve the government can draw on when global crude oil prices spike, so that the full shock of higher import costs does not land immediately on consumers at the pump.

Unlike previous fuel subsidy schemes that relied on government borrowing, the PPSF has been designed as a financial buffer rather than a subsidy. The idea is simple: instead of scrambling to find money whenever international oil prices jump, Pakistan will gradually build its own emergency reserve.

The fund has been set up in line with a federal cabinet decision taken on June 5, 2026, with the objective of minimising the impact of sharp fluctuations in petroleum product prices and ensuring greater price stability in the future.

For everyday Pakistanis, whether you ride a motorcycle to work, run a small transport business, or manage a household, this matters. Pakistan has one of the world’s largest motorcycle user bases, making petrol prices politically and economically sensitive. Even a small increase or decrease directly affects millions of daily commuters, salaried individuals and small businesses.

How Will the Fund Work?

The government has set up a dedicated account to hold all money that flows into the PPSF. All proceeds received in the name of the PPSF will be credited to the Public Account of the Federation under the newly created accounting head: Major Head G12, Special Deposit Fund, Minor Head G123, Economic Fund, Detailed Object G12314, PPSF.

The core logic is a two-phase cycle tied to global oil market conditions. If international crude prices decline, or Pakistan secures cheaper fuel through favourable import arrangements, the government will not necessarily pass the entire reduction on to consumers. Instead, motorists will still receive lower fuel prices, but part of the savings will be diverted into the PPSF. Those reserves will continue growing as long as market conditions remain favourable.

If crude oil prices suddenly climb because of wars, regional conflicts, supply disruptions, or shipping bottlenecks, the government can withdraw money from the PPSF. Rather than allowing retail fuel prices to jump overnight, those reserves would absorb part of the additional import cost, helping keep price increases smaller and more manageable.

Similar stabilisation mechanisms are used in some countries, where money is saved when oil prices are low and later used to protect consumers when prices rise.

Who Manages the PPSF and Where Will the Money Come From?

Under the new mechanism, all funds allocated or received for the Petroleum Prices Stabilisation Fund will be deposited into the designated account, while its operational framework will be jointly finalised by the Ministry of Finance, the Petroleum Division, and the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA).

The Finance Division has also informed the State Bank of Pakistan, the Presidency, Prime Minister’s Office, Cabinet Division, Ministry of Law and Justice, Ministry of Energy (Petroleum Division), and provincial governments regarding the establishment of the fund. Finance Division has requested all provincial chief secretaries, including those of Punjab, Sindh, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Balochistan, Azad Jammu and Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan, to make the necessary arrangements for receiving donations to the PPSF, indicating that the fund may also accept voluntary contributions in addition to government receipts.

Where exactly will money come from? Officials have pointed to a few potential sources. Potential funding sources could include resources accumulated in coming months, savings generated through austerity measures, and limited support from special provincial grants to the federal government. The scope for financial manoeuvring remains constrained under Pakistan’s programme commitments with the International Monetary Fund.

The fund could also be used when Pakistan sources oil from non-traditional suppliers such as the US, Russia or Iran, or when specialised storage arrangements create cost advantages over regular imports from the Middle East. By formalising the mechanism, the government aims to ensure that any future import-related savings are not left entirely with oil marketing companies and refineries, but can instead be deployed to help stabilise retail fuel prices.

One important source being discussed is the petroleum levy, the tax already collected on every litre of fuel sold. Rather than abolishing it, the government plans to redirect a portion of the collections into the stabilisation fund. However, this creates a difficult balancing act. If enough levy revenue is transferred into the PPSF, Pakistan could gradually build a meaningful financial reserve capable of cushioning future oil shocks. But diverting those funds also means less money for government spending, potentially forcing policymakers to seek additional revenue elsewhere.

Pakistan’s currency has shown signs of stability recently, the Pakistani rupee has gained for six straight months against the dollar, and a more stable exchange rate could also reduce the import cost of crude oil, giving the fund a better chance to build reserves.

Big Concern: The Fund Currently Has No Money

The notification is an important first step, but it is only a first step. Despite the announcement, the Petroleum Prices Stabilisation Fund has not yet received a single rupee.

The notification does not specify the initial size of the fund, its sources of financing beyond donations, or the circumstances under which the accumulated resources would be utilised to stabilise petroleum prices.

The Finance Division has also clarified that the operational framework of the fund has yet to be finalised. In plain terms: the account exists, but the rules for how it fills up and how money gets paid out are still being written.

The PPSF represents one of Pakistan’s most ambitious attempts to shield consumers from volatile global oil markets without returning to unsustainable fuel subsidies. If properly funded and managed transparently, it could make fuel prices more predictable and reduce the financial shock of sudden international oil price spikes.

Why Pakistan Needs This

Pakistan’s fuel prices have been on a wild ride in recent years. Pakistan paid billions of rupees in Price Differential Claims to oil companies to keep retail prices artificially low. Those subsidies strained public finances, widened fiscal deficits, and created tensions with international lenders, including the IMF.

The PPSF is intended to break this cycle by replacing emergency interventions with a structured, rule-based system that builds reserves before a crisis occurs instead of reacting afterward.

As of late June 2026, the petrol price in Pakistan is Rs. 299.50 per litre, while High-Speed Diesel (HSD) is currently priced at Rs. 311.47 per litre. Those prices are still high by historical standards, and any new conflict or disruption in global oil supply could push them higher, which is exactly the kind of shock the new fund is meant to absorb.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Petroleum Prices Stabilisation Fund?

The Petroleum Prices Stabilisation Fund (PPSF) is a new government reserve account set up to save money when global oil prices are low and use it to soften price rises when oil becomes more expensive. It is designed as a financial buffer, not a direct fuel subsidy.

Who approved the PPSF and when?

The fund has been set up in line with a federal cabinet decision taken on June 5, 2026, with the objective of minimising the impact of sharp fluctuations in petroleum product prices and ensuring greater price stability in the future. The Finance Ministry formally notified it on June 30, 2026.

Is there any money in the fund yet?

No. The fund currently has no money, and the government has not yet announced how it will operate. The Finance Division, the Petroleum Division, and OGRA will soon prepare their respective rules.

Will the PPSF bring petrol prices down immediately?

Not immediately. The fund is a long-term mechanism, not a short-term price cut. It needs time to accumulate reserves. Once funded and operational, it could help reduce sudden price jumps, but consumers should not expect an immediate drop at the pump while the rules and funding sources are still being finalised.

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