Bangkok Post

Sinopec plans expansion with a refinery in India’s backyard

- CHEN AIZHU UDITHA JAYASINGHE KRISHN KAUSHIK

SINGAPORE/COLOMBO/NEW DELHI: Chinese state energy giant Sinopec is pushing for greater access to Sri Lanka’s market, where rival India is also seeking to expand its presence, as it looks to build its first fully-controlled overseas refinery, reflecting a change in the firm’s global strategy to compensate for slowing demand growth at home.

Sinopec, the world’s largest oil refiner, is expected to complete a feasibilit­y study by June for a plant at the Chinese-run Hambantota port, after winning Colombo’s approval last November, two senior industry sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

While the China-based sources say the investment, which Colombo pegged at $4.5 billion as the country’s largest-ever foreign investment, is commercial­ly driven, neighbouri­ng India is pushing a rival plan to build a fuel products pipeline to the island nation southeast of the subcontine­nt.

Sinopec’s effort to build a refinery with a more domestic orientatio­n rather than the export-focused project sought by Sri Lanka, which has not previously been reported, puts it in direct competitio­n with India’s interests in expanding its role as an energy supplier to the country. New Delhi-run Indian Oil Corp is the No.2 fuel supplier to the country, after Sri Lankan government-owned Ceylon Petroleum Corp.

India’s foreign ministry and Indian Oil Corp did not respond to requests for comment.

Sinopec, which has not publicly spelled out its strategy, is prioritisi­ng the Sri Lanka investment and another in Saudi Arabia under a newly launched investment arm, in an effort to leverage its expertise and deep pockets to expand globally as oil demand nears its peak in China due to slowing economic growth and wider electric vehicle adoption, the sources said.

Sinopec’s efforts mark a new trend in Chinese oil and gas investment­s abroad after mergers and acquisitio­ns fell to $344 million in 2023, a fraction of the record $31 billion in 2012, according to LSEG data, following the 2014/15 oil price collapse and as Beijing tightened scrutiny of the finances of its oil giants.

Sinopec is working to finalise details including the plant’s size and product configurat­ion, while negotiatin­g with Colombo over terms including greater access to the import-reliant Sri Lankan market, an element key for its final investment call, the sources said.

The south Asian nation, grappling with a dearth of foreign exchange, has sought a refinery that would deliver 20% of its fuel domestical­ly and export the rest to generate much-needed hard currency.

Sri Lanka’s power and energy minister, Kanchana Wijesekera, told Reuters on Friday that the government is sticking to that requiremen­t.

Sinopec, however, believes domestic sales would be more profitable, the two sources said, declining to be identified as the matter is not public.

The company is considerin­g either a 160,000 barrel per day (bpd) plant or two 100,000-bpd plants built in phases, which in either case would be geared towards petrol and diesel fuel, the sources said.

Sinopec declined comment.

FULL CONTROL

Sinopec sees Hambantota as among its top-priority projects, alongside a multi-billion-dollar plan to expand a refinery into a petrochemi­cal complex at the Red Sea port of Yanbu in a joint venture with state-run Saudi Aramco, the two sources said.

Compared to its half-owned, highercost Yanbu plant built a decade ago and designed to supply the US market, Sinopec could fully leverage its expertise in refinery design, engineerin­g and operation in the Hambantota venture and thus cap overall costs.

Sinopec has in recent months sought more flexible terms for the project’s domestic marketing share but Colombo has not budged.

Sri Lanka’s only existing refinery, the 38,000 bpd Sapugaskan­da plant commission­ed in 1969, supplies less than 30% of its fuel needs.

Minister Kanchana told Reuters he expects Sinopec to sign an investment agreement by June.

CHINA VS INDIA

China and India are increasing­ly vying for influence in Sri Lanka.

In 2022, India funnelled in about $4 billion of assistance during Sri Lanka’s worst financial crisis in decades.

Since last year, New Delhi has proposed various energy “connectivi­ty” projects, including a $1.2 billion subsea power line and a fuel pipeline linking India with Sri Lanka’s Trincomale­e port on the east coast, Sri Lanka Power and Energy Ministry Secretary Sulakshana Jayawarden­a said in late February.

India is also deepening its involvemen­t in Sri Lanka’s power sector with solar projects and grid connectivi­ty.

“Their dependency on China is not there in energy supplies,” said an Indian official directly aware of the pipeline discussion­s, declining to be identified because he is not authorised to speak with media on the subject.

“That is a sector where we have a significan­t stake. That will increase with the pipeline,” the Indian official said, adding that there has been significan­t progress on discussion­s for the multiprodu­ct pipeline, with the two sides seeking to formalise the arrangemen­t “as soon as possible”.

China is a comparativ­e latecomer to Sri Lanka but has since 2010 ploughed $6.7 billion into building the Hambantota port, highways and the country’s only coal power plant in Norochchol­ai.

At Hambantota, state-owned China Merchants Group owns 85% of port operator Hambantota Internatio­nal Port Group under a 99-year lease.

Earlier this year, the group agreed to a $392 million deal to build a logistics and storage hub in Colombo port as part of Beijing’s sprawling Belt & Road Initiative.

Last September, Sinopec started a fuel import and distributi­on business in Sri Lanka with 150 petrol stations, sourcing fuel mostly from Singapore, which Colombo expected to save the government about $500 million in foreign exchange over the next two years.

 ?? REUTERS ?? An employee walks past oil tanks at a Sinopec refinery in Wuhan, Hubei province, China.
REUTERS An employee walks past oil tanks at a Sinopec refinery in Wuhan, Hubei province, China.
 ?? NYT ?? The port in Hambantota, Sri Lanka. Sinopec is expected to complete a feasibilit­y study by June for a refinery at the Chinese-run port.
NYT The port in Hambantota, Sri Lanka. Sinopec is expected to complete a feasibilit­y study by June for a refinery at the Chinese-run port.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand