Kuwait Times

Rosneft enters India with $13 billion Essar deal

-

MOSCOW: In a spectacula­rly costly gamble aimed at boosting Russia’s strategic position, state-controlled giant Rosneft is investing in India’s Essar Oil to muscle into a promising market with outlets throughout Asia. Russian President Vladimir Putin returned from last week’s BRICS summit in Goa with one of the largest deals the oil sector has seen in the last two years of falling prices: 98 percent of Essar Oil at a valuation of $12.9 billion. Rosneft-Russia’s biggest oil company led by Putin’s close ally Igor Sechin-will buy 49 percent of Essar Oil, which owns the Vadinar refinery in western India.

Vadinar is one of the country’s largest refineries and one of the world’s most modern, with access to a port navigable by the largest vessels. Essar Oil operates 2,700 petrol stations and was controlled until now by billionair­e brothers Shashi and Ravi Ruia. A further 49 percent will be acquired by a group of investors led by Trafigura oil traders, one of Rosneft’s partners. “Rosneft is entering one of the most promising and fast-growing world markets,” Sechin said, according to a statement. Rosneft said the Vadinar refinery will allow it to process its crude oil produced in Venezuela, which is heavy and more difficult to refine.

It could also serve as a base for exporting to the Asia-Pacific region, including Indonesia, Vietnam, the Philippine­s and Australia. While the deal represents an unpreceden­ted foreign acquisitio­n from the Indian perspectiv­e, for Russia it is “an important strategic victory,” said Emily Stromquist, an analyst at Eurasia Group. “It sends a signal to the EU and US that Russia has alternativ­e market opportunit­ies despite sanctions” imposed over Russia’s actions in Ukraine, she wrote in a note. “It also provides a much-needed opportunit­y for export diversific­ation as European demand flattens and Chinese growth becomes more unpredicta­ble.”

Allied nations

With its 1.2 billion inhabitant­s, India is the world’s fourth largest consumer of hydrocarbo­ns, with demand constantly growing. It is increasing­ly dependent on crude imports, despite authoritie­s taking steps to encourage foreign investment and seeking to diversify its suppliers, currently mainly in the Middle East. Indian companies in turn this year bought almost half of Vankor, one of Rosneft’s most promising oil fields in Siberia.

“Rosneft has the ambition to develop itself into a global energy group... but the opportunit­ies to develop business abroad are limited, especially in Western countries,” said Valery Nesterov, an analyst at Sberbank CIB. “The markets that are promising are in Asia,” he said, while Rosneft “acts in the interests of the state and develops cooperatio­n with countries that are friends with Russia.” The Russian group has already grown considerab­ly in recent years. It took over the ruins of oil magnate Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky’s group after his jailing and has since increased its acquisitio­ns, notably TNK-BP in 2013 for $55 billion.

Due to the weak ruble, it is sitting on large cash reserves that soften the effect of oil prices falling in dollars. It has just proved its influence by pushing the reluctant government to allow it to buy a majority stake in Russia’s number six oil company Bashneft, which the state wanted to privatize. Internatio­nally the Ukrainian crisis has struck a blow to Rosneft’s policy of forming partnershi­ps with Western giants such as BP, Exxonmobil and Statoil hence the need to invest in emerging markets that are not affected by sanctions. Pavel Kushnir, an analyst at Deutsche Bank, did not conceal his skepticism over Essar, saying he could not remember a single “example of an outright successful acquisitio­n or investment that a Russian energy company made abroad.” —AFP

 ??  ?? VADINAR: Photo shows an Indian Oil Refinery of Essar Oil at Vadinar village, near Jamnagar, some 380 km from Ahmedabad. In a spectacula­rly costly gamble aimed at boosting Russia’s strategic position, state-controlled giant Rosneft is investing in...
VADINAR: Photo shows an Indian Oil Refinery of Essar Oil at Vadinar village, near Jamnagar, some 380 km from Ahmedabad. In a spectacula­rly costly gamble aimed at boosting Russia’s strategic position, state-controlled giant Rosneft is investing in...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait