Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

New Delhi, Beijing in talks to set up ‘oil buyers club’

- Press Trust of India feedback@livemint.com

With oil producers’ cartel Opec (Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) playing havoc with prices, India discussed with China the possibilit­y of forming an ‘oil buyers club’ that can negotiate better terms with sellers as well as getting more US crude oil to Asia to cut dominance of the oil block.

As a follow up of oil minister Dharmendra Pradhan’s idea floated at the Internatio­nal Energy Forum (IEF) meeting here in April, Indian Oil Corp. (IOC) chairman Sanjiv Singh travelled to Beijing this month to meet Wang Yilin, chairman of China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC), a top source said.

On discussion table was debottlene­cking infrastruc­ture to facilitate more US crude oil comes to Asia so as to cut the dominance of Opec, which supplies about 60% of India’s oil needs.

Production cuts by OPEC have led to internatio­nal oil prices hitting a four year high last month that forced a ₹3.8 per litre hike in petrol and ₹3.38 a litre increase in diesel prices. Rates started to cool towards month end and retail prices have been cut thereafter.

In a throwback to 2005 when the then oil minister Mani Shankar Aiyar had proposed an alliance of the oil consuming nations, Pradhan wants to form an oil buyers club with China, Japan and South Korea to take up issues like premium being charged from Asian buyers.

At the IEF meeting, India and China agreed to join hands to have a collective bargaining power against cartelisat­ion of oil producers. Singh’s visit was to take this forward with concrete proposals for cooperatio­n, the source said.

So far, India has not been able to bargain better rates from the Gulf-based producers of the oil cartel, Opec. Instead of getting a discount for bulk purchases, West Asian producers, such as Saudi Arabia, charge a so-called ‘Asian Premium’ for shipments to Asian buyers, including India and Japan, as opposed to Europe.

According to professor Yoshiki Ogawa of Japan, the Asian Premium annually costs somewhere around $5-10 billion for Asian importers. The source said possibilit­ies of joint sourcing of oil as well as combined bargaining to bring down Asian premium was discussed. Similar collaborat­ion will be proposed to Japan and Korea as well.

With CNPC or its affiliates selling in the overseas market a large portion of oil produced from fields it owns in third countries, India expressed interest in buying the Chinese firm’s equity oil directly, the source said. India is the world’s third-largest oil importer after China and the US. Japan is the fourth largest importer and South Korea is right behind it. The four nations account for over a third of the oil imports in the world.

“Why should biggest consumers pay more. Why should these countries pay more in name of Asian premium,” Pradhan had said in April.

“All the four major Asian economies should come together. And India will try to create a network for that within the four countries.”

He had stated that like producers have a say in pricing and supply, consumers should also get a say. This is India’s third attempt to unite major Asian energy importers to beat the producers’ cartel.

NEW DELHI:

 ?? MINT ?? India and China also discussed getting more US crude oil to Asia to cut dominance of Opec
MINT India and China also discussed getting more US crude oil to Asia to cut dominance of Opec

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