Khaleej Times

India, Aramco partner on $44B refinery

- Nidhi Verma, Promit Mukherjee and Florence Tan

new delhi — Saudi Aramco and a consortium of Indian state refiners agreed to build a mega refinery and petrochemi­cal project on India’s West coast for an estimated $44 billion, oil officials at the signing of an initial agreement said on Wednesday.

Top executives of Saudi Aramco and India’s Ratnagiri Refinery & Petrochemi­cals (RRPL) — a joint venture of Indian Oil Corp, Hindustan Petroleum Corp and Bharat Petroleum Corp — signed a memorandum of understand­ing to take equal stakes in the project in Maharashtr­a state.

The project includes a 1.2 million-barrel-per-day (bpd) refinery integrated with petrochemi­cal facilities with a total capacity of 18 million tonnes per year, the officials said on the sidelines of the Internatio­nal Energy Forum.

The plant will be one of the largest refining and petrochemi­cal complexes in the world, built to meet fast-growing fuel and petrochemi­cals demand in India and elsewhere, and providing a steady outlet for Saudi crude oil, they said.

“Large as this project may be, it does not by itself satisfy our desire to invest in India ... We see India as a priority for investment­s and for our crude supplies,” Saudi Arabia Energy Minister Khalid Al Falih said.

“We’re very much interested in retail ... We want to be consumer facing,” he said.

Saudi Aramco will supply at least 50 per cent of the crude to be processed at the planned refinery, officials said.

Aramco may introduce at a later stage another strategic partner to share its 50 per cent stake, Al Falih said.

“We have somebody in mind and we will announce in due course,” Aramco Chief Executive Amir Nasser said, without elaboratin­g.

Saudi’s petrochemi­cal company Sabic is also keen to invest in a cracker and other facilities in India, he said.

Aramco, like other major producers, wants to tap rising demand growth and invest in the world’s third-biggest oil consumer. Last year, it opened an office in New Delhi.

Large as this project may be, it does not by itself satisfy our desire to invest in India Khalid Al Falih, Saudi Energy Minister

India outlined plans in February to expand its refining capacity by 77 per cent to about 8.8 million bpd by 2030.

The signing confirmed a Reuters story that ran earlier on Wednesday after representa­tives of Aramco held a marathon meeting with their Indian counterpar­ts on Tuesday.

Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil exporter, is moving to invest in refineries overseas to help lock in demand for its crude, and expand its market share ahead of an initial public offering that is expected later this or next year.

During a visit to New Delhi in February, Al Falih had said Saudi Arabia would sign oil supply deals as part of any agreements to buy stakes in Indian refineries, a strategy it has adopted to expand its market share in Asia and fend off rivals.

Last year, Saudi Arabia pledged billions of dollars of investment­s in refinery projects in Indonesia and Malaysia that came with long-term crude oil supply deals. — Reuters

 ?? — AFP ?? Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil exporter, is moving to invest in refineries overseas to help lock in demand for its crude.
— AFP Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil exporter, is moving to invest in refineries overseas to help lock in demand for its crude.

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