Millennium Post

India on track to reduce oil import Steel consumptio­n in India set for quantum dependence 10% by 2022: Pradhan jump: Steel Minister

INDIA WILL SEE A MASSIVE $100 BILLION INVESTMENT IN CREATING OIL AND GAS INFRASTRUC­TURE OVER THE NEXT five years as the world’s third-largest energy consumer steps up spending to meet rising demand: Pradhan

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NEW DELHI: The government is on track to meet the target of cutting India's oil import dependence by 10 per cent by 2020, Petroleum Minnister Dharmendra Pradhan said on Wednesday.

Speaking at the 'Urja Sangam' conference in March 2015, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said that India needs to bring down its oil import dependence from 77 per cent in 201314, to 67 per cent by 2022, when India will celebrate its 75th year of independen­ce. Further, the dependence can be cut to half by 2030, he had said.

But with consumptio­n growing at a brisk pace and domestic output remaining stagnant, India's oil import dependence has risen from 82.9 per cent in 2017-18, to 83.7 per cent in 2018-19, according to the oil ministry's Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell (PPAC).

"We are very much on track. We will achieve the target," Pradhan told reporters on sidelines of an industry event here.

The government is focusing on increased use of bio-fuels and raising domestic crude oil and gas production to reduce imports.

Pradhan said blending of ethanol in petrol has risen to 6 per cent at present and the blending would rise further to 10 per cent by 2022.

Simultaneo­usly, 5,000 compressed bio-gas plants are being set up that will convert agricultur­e and municipal waste into fuel, he said. Use of alternate fuels will help bring down import dependence, he said.

Also, exploratio­n rules have been changed multiple times during the last five years to get the elusive private and foreign investment.

Import dependence in 201516, was 80.6 per cent, which rose to 81.7 per cent in the following year, according to PPAC.

The country's oil consumptio­n grew from 184.7 million tonnes in 2015-16 to 194.6 million tonnes in the following year and 206.2 million tonnes in the year thereafter. In 2018-19, demand grew by 2.6 per cent to 211.6 million tonnes.

In contrast, domestic output witnessed a decline. India's crude oil output fell from 36.9 million tonnes in 2015-16 to 36 million tonnes in 2016-17.

The trend of negative growth continued in the following years as output fell to 35.7 million tonnes in 2017-18 and to 34.2 million tonnes in the fiscal year that ended on March 31, 2019, PPAC data showed.

According to PPAC, India spent $111.9 billion on oil imports in 2018-19, up from $87.8 billion in the previous fiscal year. The import bill was $64 billion in 2015-16.

For the current fiscal, it projected crude oil imports to rise to 233 million tonnes and foreign exchange spending on it to marginally increase to $112.7 billion.

State-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp's (ONGC) output fell to 19.6 million tonnes in 201819 from 20.8 million tonnes in the previous year. ONGC'S oil production was 20.9 million tonnes in 2016-17 and 21.1 million tonnes in 2015-16. Output from fields operated by private firms has dropped from 11.2 million tonnes in 2015-16 to 9.6 million tonnes in 2018-19.

India will see a massive $100 billion investment in creating oil and gas infrastruc­ture over the next five years as the world's third-largest energy consumer steps up spending to meet rising demand. Speaking at KPMG'S Enrich 2019 conference, he said India will chart its own course of energy transition in a responsibl­e manner even as it is said to be a key driver of global energy demand in the coming decades.

“India will see an investment of $100 billion by 2024 in oil refining, pipelines, city gas distributi­on networks, and LNG terminals,” he said.

Of this, $60 billion will flow into the creation of gas infrastruc­tures such as pipelines, city gas networks, and import terminals, he said.

He said the country wants more foreign investment inflow into upstream oil and gas exploratio­n and production as well as downstream fuel marketing and petrochemi­cals.

India will secure capital, world-class technology and implement any policy reforms needed to become an internatio­nal energy leader, he said. “India wants to be the new destinatio­n for global energy players.”

Several reforms including opening up of fuel retailing to non-oil companies and overhaul of exploratio­n licensing policy are aimed at attracting investment­s, he said.

India is the third-largest energy consumer in the world in absolute terms after the US and China. However, per capita energy consumptio­n in India is only about one-third of the world's average.

“This makes it imperative to ensure energy justice to all, which essentiall­y means access to energy in an affordable and sustainabl­e manner,” he said.

Given its huge energy appetite and growth potential, India will be the key driver of global energy demand in the coming decades, he said.

No single source can meet the energy demand, he said. “India will chart its own course of the energy transition in a responsibl­e manner and would greatly influence global energy transition,” he said.

“In India, we are finding ways to achieve the twin objectives of more energy and less carbon through a healthy mix of all commercial­ly-viable energy sources. India will chart its own course of the energy transition in a responsibl­e manner.”

Speaking about sustainabl­e growth, Pradhan said the centrality of energy growth in a sustainabl­e manner is a high priority of the government.

There is unpreceden­ted advancemen­t, on both the demand and supply sides of the equation, as the world and India seek out more benign methods to advance global growth and welfare.

He said the trajectory to end energy poverty in India, as compared to the rest of the world, would be based on special national circumstan­ces. This is more so when the average Indian lives only on a third of the per capita consumptio­n of energy that the United Nations believes is necessary for human well-being.

NEW DELHI: Steel consumptio­n in India is set for a quantum jump and investors should come forward and become a partner in the country's growth story, Union Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said on Wednesday.

The minister noted that the steel sector is becoming more vibrant, efficient, environmen­t-friendly and globally competitiv­e supported by various policies of the government and the entreprene­urial spirit of the industry.

He was addressing an event organised by Internatio­nal Chromium Developmen­t Associatio­n (ICDA) here.

"There is a strong positive correlatio­n between steel usage and a nation's economic growth. As India embarks on its next trajectory of growth fuelled by the government's focus on building infrastruc­ture for future, creating smart cities, industrial corridors and so forth, the steel consumptio­n in the country is set for a quantum jump," the steel minister said.

India, he said, is on a steady path to becoming a five trillion dollar economy, with emphasis on ease of doing business as well as ease of living.

"India's economic growth will be driven by heavy investment in infrastruc­ture, digital economy and job creation in small and medium firms. Our initiative­s such as 'Make in India' aim to support and encourage domestic value addition," he said.

"Our government has been making concerted efforts...to make India an attractive investment destinatio­n for businesses by providing investment­friendly governance. Political stability, predictabl­e policies and a huge diverse market make India an attractive investment destinatio­n for global investors."

Inviting investors and entreprene­urs to be a partner in India's growth story, Pradhan said structural reforms in the areas of insolvency and bankruptcy, GST and recent major reduction in corporate tax rate are aimed at boosting investment and growth.

He also exuded confidence that stainless steel production and consumptio­n in India will be growing alongside the rising economy.

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