Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Small firms see impact as flow of oxygen hit

- Kalpana Pathak kalpana.p@livemint.com

The move to divert oxygen supplies from industry to hospitals across the country could impact the operations of hundreds of small and mid-sized companies, company executives warned.

Over half a dozen companies, including Tata Steel Ltd, Reliance Industries Ltd, JSW Steel Ltd and SAIL Ltd, are pumping thousands of tonnes of medicalgra­de oxygen as India grapples with the worst surge in coronaviru­s infections.

But with demand for medical oxygen soaring, the disruption in the supply for industrial use could hit the operations of smalland mid-sized companies engaged in metal fabricatio­n, automotive components, shipbreaki­ng, paper and engineerin­g, analysts said.

Demand for medical oxygen rocketed fivefold in the second week of April. Liquid medical oxygen or LMO is a crucial medical requiremen­t for the treatment of covid patients.

The government on April 18 restricted the supply of oxygen for industrial purposes. It, however, exempted some industries such as makers of ampules and vials and oxygen cylinders, pharmaceut­icals, petroleum refineries, steel plants, nuclear energy facilities, wastewater treatment plants, food and water purificati­on, and process industries that require uninterrup­ted operation of furnaces. “These small- and mid-sized firms typically do not have captive oxygen plants and source their requiremen­t through merchant suppliers for operations such as welding, cutting, cleaning and chemical processes,” said Gautam Shahi, director, Crisil Ratings.

Setting up an air-separation plant or importing oxygen is costly and time-consuming, an unviable propositio­n for these firms, leaving them vulnerable.

On Tuesday, RIL upped its earlier commitment of supplying 100 tonnes of medical grade oxygen a day, saying it is tweaking manufactur­ing at its Jamnagar oil refineries to produce over 700 tonnes a day of medicalgra­de oxygen. It plans to raise the capacity to 1,000 tonnes.

While Tata Steel is supplying around 300 tonnes of oxygen per day, the Tata group on Tuesday announced it would import 24 cryogenic containers to transport liquid oxygen.

State-owned Indian Oil Corp. Ltd (150 tonnes) and Bharat Petroleum Corp. Ltd (100 tonnes a day), too, have started diverting oxygen produced at their refineries. JSW Group is supplying 610 tonnes of medical oxygen every day.

Oxygen is consumed by industry in two ways—onsite and merchant sales. Onsite is through captive plants for process-driven industries, which account for 75-80% of oxygen manufactur­ed in India. The rest is supplied through merchant sales (called liquid oxygen) through cryogenic tanks and cylinders. The healthcare sector consumes 10% of merchant sales. “This disruption in oxygen supplies for industrial use will be around for another six-seven weeks and could impact manufactur­ing activity. It, however, would not be as severe as last April,” said Madan Sabnavis, economist, chief economist, Care Ratings.

 ?? PTI ?? Demand for medical oxygen rocketed fivefold in the second week of April.
PTI Demand for medical oxygen rocketed fivefold in the second week of April.

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