India plans 77 per cent rise in refining capacity by 2030: Govt

India imports 80 per cent of its energy requirements and is planning ahead to cater to the rise in demand.

Update: 2018-02-08 09:11 GMT
Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) has become India's first company to hold a meeting of its Board of Directors at high sea. (File Photo)

New Delhi: India plans to raise its oil refining capacity by 77 per cent to 438.65 million tonnes by 2030 with Reliance Industries and Rosneft-controlled Essar Oil adding the biggest chunk, a government report said on Thursday.

The country has the capacity to turn 247.6 million tonnes crude oil into fuel annually. This is slated to rise to 414.35 MT by 2025 and to 438.65 MT by 2030, said the report of the Working Group on Enhancing Refining capacity.

The existing refining capacity exceeded the fuel demand of 193.74 MT in 2016-17, but the International Energy Agency (IEA) forecast that this demand will reach 458 MT by 2040.

As the world's third-biggest oil consumer, India imports 80 per cent of its energy requirements and is planning ahead to cater to the rise in demand.

While it has no immediate plans to raise capacity for its 35.2 MT only-for-exports refinery, Reliance Industries' plans to raise its capacity of its older unit to 63 MT by 2030 from current 33 MT.

Essar is looking to more than double capacity of its Vadinar refinery in Gujarat to 45 MT from current 20 MT. But the biggest single capacity addition would be when the planned 60 MT a year west coast refinery in Maharashtra comes on stream in 2025, the report said.

State-owned Indian Oil Corp (IOC) plans to raise capacity from 80.7 MT to 116.55 MT with expansions at its Gujarat, Panipat, Paradip and Chennai refineries.

ONGC Group, which now includes Hindustan Petroleum Corp Ltd (HPCL), plans to add about 20 MT to its existing capacity of 42.2 MT while Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd (BPCL) would raise refining capacity to 56 MT from current 36.5 MT.

The world energy demand is expected to double in the next 30 years with energy portfolio undergoing a transition to one that includes a wide range of sources. This rise in demand would lead to gradual shift towards renewable and cleaner fuels richer in hydrogen or to neat hydrogen.

It was felt that an approach paper for refinery capacity expansion of refineries needs to be prepared for meeting the growing demand of petroleum products in the country, the report said.

India has leapfrogged from a modest 62 MT per annum refining capacity in 1998 to 232 MT at end of March 31, 2016. The growth in refining capacity, which has made India a leading exporter of petroleum products since 2001-02, has been possible because of the de-licensing of petroleum refining by the government.

The report said RIL's domestic tariff area or DTA refinery capacity would be raised to 40.5 MT by 2025 and to 63 MT by 2030, from 33 MT currently. Essar, on the other hand, would go to 45 MT from current 20 MT by 2020.  

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