Millennium Post

PRADHAN DEFENDS MEGA OIL REFINERY

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NEW DELHI: Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan on Tuesday strongly defended plans to build the Rs 2.7 lakh crore oil refinery on the west coast by 2022 despite the push for electric vehicles, saying that India needs multi-source fuels to meet its fast-growing energy needs.

The plan to build the 60 million tonnes (MT) a year capacity refinery in Ratnagiri district of Maharashtr­a has come in for questionin­g after Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari announced that only electric cars would be produced in the country after 2030.

Besides, Railway Minister Piyush Goyal has said that diesel locomotive­s will be phased out by 2022.

"India consumes just 6 per cent of the global primary energy at present but it will account for 25 per cent of incrementa­l growth," Pradhan said at a KPMG Energy Summit here.

In order to meet the vast growing energy needs, India needs "multi-source fuels," he said, adding that there is a requiremen­t for convention­al fuels, coal, renewable sources as well as nuclear.

India has a capacity to refine 232.066 MT of crude oil into fuel a year, which exceeded the demand of 194.2 MT in 2016-17 fiscal.

According to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (EA), this demand is expected to reach 458 MT by 2040.

Pradhan said India's per capita petrochemi­cal consumptio­n is just 10 kg as against the global average of 30 kg. And the nation is import dependent to meet its petrochemi­cal needs.

"So if the petrochemi­cal demand grows with the expanding economy, we would need domestic production," he said.

The planned Rs 2.7 lakh crore project in Ratanagiri district of Maharashtr­a will have a 10-12 MT petrochemi­cal complex.

Petrochemi­cals which form the building blocks for products used in the manufactur­e of wide range of items, from plastics to cosmetics, is derived from refining crude oil or natural gas.

Refineries world over are looking at value addition to produce petrochemi­cals.

Pradhan said that just a couple of days back Saudi Aramco and Saudi Arabia's chemicals company SABIC announced plans to develop a fully-integrated crude oil to chemicals (COTC) complex.

The $20 billion project is planned to process 400,000 barrels per day (20 MT) of crude oil and produce some 9 MT of chemicals and base oils per year by 2025.

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