The National - News

ADNOC AND ARAMCO PARTNERS IN A $44bn INDIAN REFINERY

They will hold 50% stake in the project and the remainder will belong to an India-led group

- JENNIFER GNANA

Abu Dhabi National Oil Company and Saudi Aramco have signed an agreement to jointly invest in a $44 billion (Dh161.6bn) refinery on the west coast of India, the companies said yesterday.

Aramco, which in April signed an agreement to jointly develop the 1.2 million barrels per day Ratnagiri refining and chemicals complex in the western Indian state of Maharashtr­a with a group of Indian refiners, will share its stake with Adnoc, making it the first such agreement between the two energy companies.

“By investing in this project, we will both secure off-take of our crude to a key market for Adnoc, as well as strengthen access in one of the world’s largest and fastest-growing refining and petrochemi­cals markets,” said Dr Sultan Al Jaber, Minister of State and Adnoc Group chief executive.

Abu Dhabi, which accounts for 4.5 per cent of the world’s oil production – much of it through Adnoc – has increasing­ly shifted towards building more downstream capacity at home and abroad.

The UAE is expected to spend Dh400bn over the next five years in the downstream sector, and developing Abu Dhabi’s sour gas reserves.

The Indian refinery investment also comes on the heels of Adnoc’s own commitment to spend Dh165bn with partners in developing domestic downstream capabiliti­es, including building the world’s largest refining and chemicals complex, in the western city of Ruwais.

The Ratnagiri integrated complex will have refining and petchems capacity to process up to 1.2 million barrels of crude and 18 million tonnes a year of chemical products.

A pre-feasibilit­y study to determine the project’s overall configurat­ion will be jointly executed by the parties, the companies said, without specifying a timeline.

While Aramco and Adnoc will jointly hold 50 per cent of the Ratnagiri Refinery and Petrochemi­cals Limited joint venture, the remainder will be held by a consortium comprising the state-owned Indian Oil Corporatio­n, Bharat Petroleum Corporatio­n and Hindustan Petroleum Corporatio­n. The scheme is part of efforts by India, the world’s third-biggest user of crude after the US and China, to double its refining capacity from 247 million tonnes to 600 million tonnes by 2040.

India, one of the big importers of Middle East crude, is home to some of the world’s largest refining and chemicals facilities, with a doubling of capacity expected to require up to $300bn in investment.

“If you want to build a worldscale competitiv­e integrated refining and chemical asset, the cost is enormous,” said Alan Gelder, global refining and oil marketing research head at Edinburgh energy consultanc­y Wood Mackenzie.

“The western Indian project is a very big investment. Adnoc could provide part of the crude diet, while Aramco could provide the rest, and the host country could get a major asset that supplies local markets. That is beneficial to all three.”

Indian Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, who confirmed Abu Dhabi’s involvemen­t in the Ratnagiri project during Adnoc’s downstream investment conference in May, said Indian companies were interested in participat­ing in the company’s first licensing round.

“We are in talks that India could bid in the next licensing round of the UAE with some Middle Eastern companies like Mubadala,” Mr Pradhan said at the signing ceremony yesterday, at which Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Co-operation Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed was also present.

“Oil producers don’t want to miss India’s bus.” This is Adnoc’s fourth engagement with India this year.

In March, a consortium led by state-owned ONGC picked up a 10 per cent interest in the Lower Zakum offshore concession for Dh2.2bn, marking the first hydrocarbo­n rights agreement between the countries.

The 40-year agreement will guarantee security of supply for India and lock in market share for Adnoc.

In late May, a cargo ship carrying two million barrels of crude left Abu Dhabi for India to be parked in the country’s strategic oil storage facility in Mangalore. In February, Adnoc also awarded Mumbai’s Larsen and Toubro a contract worth more than Dh1.25bn to develop the onshore Haliba asset in Abu Dhabi.

We will ... strengthen access in one of the world’s largest and fastestgro­wing refining and petrochemi­cal markets DR SULTAN AL JABER Adnoc Group chief executive

 ??  ?? Minister of State and Adnoc chief executive Dr Sultan Al Jaber and Aramco chief executive Amin Nasser sign an agreement in New Delhi yesterday. The ceremony was attended by Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Co-operation Sheikh Abdullah bin...
Minister of State and Adnoc chief executive Dr Sultan Al Jaber and Aramco chief executive Amin Nasser sign an agreement in New Delhi yesterday. The ceremony was attended by Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Co-operation Sheikh Abdullah bin...

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