The South Korean government plans to temporarily reduce taxes on LPG and other motor fuels by 20pc to mitigate a recent rise in oil and gas prices.
Seoul plans to cut fuel taxes on LPG, as well as gasoline and diesel, for six months, starting from November.
It is unclear if the reduction in fuel taxes will do much to boost LPG demand in the country's autogas sector, where consumption has been shrinking. LPG demand remains dominated by taxis.
Part of the reason for cutting fuel taxes could be to encourage more domestic travel, a South Korean LPG importer said. But it may fail to entice more travel as fuel prices will remain at record-high levels. Travel by autogas-fuelled taxis may also fail to get a boost unless taxi fares fall in line with the fuel taxes, the importer said.

