Arab Times

Shutdowns to hit Indian ‘state-owned’ refineries

Aramco land purchase on hold

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NEW DELHI/MUMBAI, Dec 4, (RTRS): A wave of shutdowns will hit Indian state-owned refineries next year as the country prepares for cleaner fuels from April 2020, company officials said, in moves that could temporaril­y dent oil demand and push up imports of refined fuels.

India, the world’s third-biggest oil importer and consumer, has surplus refining capacity and rarely imports gasoil and gasoline.

It also means that demand for fuel produced by India’s privately owned refiners will likely climb during the period, as state refiners seek to fill the gap.

State refiners – Indian Oil Corp, Bharat Petroleum, Hindustan Petroleum and Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemi­cals – account for about 60 percent of the country’s nearly 5 million barrels per day (bpd) capacity.

The refiners will have to shut gasoil – and gasoline-making units at their plants for 15 to 45 days to churn out Euro VI-compliant fuels from January 2020 to be able to sell them from April of that year.

“Next year will be challengin­g for us as I have to protect my crude throughput and finish the job at the refineries and get ready for Euro VI by April 2020,” said B.V. Rama Gopal, head of refineries at IOC, the country’s top refiner.

IOC plans a roughly monthlong shutdown of gasoline- and gasoil-producing units at all of its 11 refineries, he told Reuters.

Revamp

Key parts of the refineries requiring a revamp include naphtha hydrotreat­ers, catalytic reforming units, isomerisat­ion units, diesel sulphurise­rs and diesel hydrotreat­ers. In addition, some refiners have to revamp or set up new gasoline treaters, hydrogen production and sulphur recovery units.

India has been gradually reducing sulphur emissions from vehicles since 2000, when fuel sold in the country had 500 parts per million (ppm). Motorists in Delhi, which faces major air pollution, moved in April this year to EuroVI standards, which allow up to 10 ppm sulphur and are known locally as Bharat Stage-VI.

HPCL will shut its diesel and gasoline units while upgrading the crude units at its Vizag and Mumbai refineries for 30 to 45 days, its chairman M. K. Surana said.

He forecast a slight reduction in the company’s crude intake.

“We will take the shutdown in one shot so we don’t have multiple disruption­s,” Surana said.

Surana and MRPL managing director M. Venkatesh, who intends to shut some refinery units for up to a month, said they see no need to import fuel in 2019 given that state fuel retailers can access robust production at local private refiners.

Their view is challenged by analysts who estimate weaker gasoil and gasoline prices would prompt state refiners to import auto fuel instead of going to private peers who levy coastal freight charges on top of normal prices.

A similar phenomenon was witnessed when India migrated to Euro IV fuel in phases to April 2017, said Sri Paravaikka­rasu, head of east of Suez oil for consultant­s FGE in Singapore.

“There is a high possibilit­y that the lengthy shutdown period could result in a shortage of current Euro IV products in the domestic market. In such an event, Indian NOCs (national oil companies) should turn to the internatio­nal market for product purchases,” she said.

FGE expects India could import 40,000 bpd of gasoline and 70,000 bpd of gasoil for about one quarter in 2019 because of the shutdowns.

Cleaner

BPCL, India’s second-biggest state refiner, has upgraded two of its refineries to superior-grade fuels, and is revamping the firehit hydrocrack­er at its Mumbai refinery so it can produce cleaner diesel, its head of refineries R. Ramachandr­an said.

BPCL plans to shut a crude unit and some other secondary units at the Mumbai refinery for maintenanc­e and upgrades next year for 15-20 days to produce cleaner fuels.

Ramachandr­an said there could be a need to import “some additional cargoes but it will not be a major hiccup”.

“The shutdowns will be spaced out in a manner to ensure there is enough product in the market. It will be a well-orchestrat­ed exercise,” he said.

Meanwhile, India’s western state of Maharashtr­a has put on hold the process to buy land for the country’s biggest oil refinery that state-run oil companies are building with Saudi Aramco, Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis said, after strong opposition from farmers.

The $44 billion refinery was seen as a game changer for both parties – offering India steady fuel supplies and meeting Saudi Arabia’s need to secure regular buyers for its oil.

But thousands of farmers are refusing to surrender land, fearing it could damage a region famed for its Alphonso mangoes, vast cashew plantation­s and fishing hamlets that boast bountiful catches of seafood.

“The entire (land acquisitio­n) process has been stayed. We haven’t acquired any land,” Fadnavis told state assembly on Wednesday as opposition parties and a coalition partner Shiv Sena were opposing the refinery.

The Ratnagiri Refinery & Petrochemi­cals Ltd (RRPL), which is running the project, says the 1.2 million barrel-per-day (bpd) refinery, and an integrated petrochemi­cal site with a capacity of 18 million tonnes per year, will help create direct and indirect employment for up to 150,000 people, with jobs that pay better than agricultur­e or fishing.

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