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Bangladesh set to sign gasoil deal with India

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Bangladesh set to sign gasoil deal with India

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The sales and purchase agreement is expected to be signed on October 22 during Indian foreign minister Sushma Swaraj’s visit on October 22. Photograph: (Reuters)

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New Delhi, Delhi, India Oct 18, 2017, 03.55 PM (IST)
Bangladesh Petroleum Corp (BPC) is set to sign a 15-year deal with Indian oil refiner Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd (BPCL) to import gasoil to meet the country's energy demand, two company officials with the direct knowledge of the matter said.

The sales and purchase agreement is expected to be signed on October 22 during Indian foreign minister Sushma Swaraj’s visit to the capital of Dhaka, the BPC officials said.

The deal will be the country’s first long-term agreement with any Indian supplier.

BPCL will supply up to 250,000 tonnes of gasoil each year from its majority-owned Numaligarh refinery for the first three years of the deal to the BPC's northern fuel depot via a 131-km (79 miles) pipeline, which will be built by India, they said.

"The volume will be increased in line with our demand," said one of the officials, adding the deal would come into effect when the pipeline is built.

Numaligarh refinery is already supplying a small volume to the state-owned BPC for the country's northern region.

The refinery, located in the eastern Indian state of Assam, will supply around 22,000 tonnes of gasoil with a sulphur content of 500 parts per million (ppm) between October and December by railroad, the officials said.

BPC will pay a premium of $5.50 per barrel over the Middle-East quotes under the 15-year deal, up from the current premiums of $2.20 a barrel for gasoil cargoes it receives by tanker through the country's southeastern port of Chittagong, said one of the officials.

"This is cost-effective because there is no additional transport cost as the supply is being unloaded in our depot in the northern part," the BPC official said.

BPC received its first batch this month under the three-month agreement and its fourth since 2016 amid warming ties between the two neighbouring countries.

Bangladesh typically ships in around 3.2 million tonnes of diesel and 2.5 million tonnes of fuel oil annually.

Sellers include Kuwait Petroleum Corp, Malaysia's Petroleum Nasional Berhad, Emirates National Oil Company, Philippines National Oil Co, Vietnam's Petrolimex, Thailand's PTT, Indonesia's Bumi Siak Pusako and Zhenhua Oil.

http://www.wionews.com/business-economy/bangladesh-set-to-sign-gasoil-deal-with-india-22602
 
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@Nilgiri they import everything. Lol oil from Assam?? It’s cheaper to get it from Arabia directly but that would require them to have the capacity to build refineries.
No point building oil refineries anymore. Days of oil are numbered. Other sources of energy will dominate in the future. Importing oil is a short fix.
BPC will pay a premium of $5.50 per barrel over the Middle-East quotes under the 15-year deal, up from the current premiums of $2.20 a barrel for gasoil cargoes it receives by tanker through the country's southeastern port of Chittagong, said one of the officials.

"This is cost-effective because there is no additional transport cost as the supply is being unloaded in our depot in the northern part," the BPC official said.
 
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@Nilgiri they import everything. Lol oil from Assam?? It’s cheaper to get it from Arabia directly but that would require them to have the capacity to build refineries.

Apparently it works out to be cheaper to get from Assam, its better hedging and lower transportation costs.

After Indian performance at hunger index we want to help you guys...:enjoy:

Why are you lot only adding a cpl points to much larger, broad development index HDI these days each year and helping a country (ranked above you by fair amount) which is adding twice to thrice that?....and magnitude of percentile outranks you in corruption/credibility/institution to begin with? BBS couldn't lie and fluff up that much over there (HDI)?
 
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Refined oil and chemicals are India's main export in merchandise trade,not surprising
 
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They don't even have refineries?? @Nilgiri

They have some, largest one inherited from East Pakistan days. There is not much capacity found in BD given high capital costs and land acquisition etc. I think their energy market will have to grow several fold till major new refineries become feasible.

As you can see BD imports refined petroleum products in the rough ratio of 3:1 compared to crude:

http://www.bpc.gov.bd/contactus.php?id=46
 
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