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LN Mittal, HPCL to bid for Nigerian refinery
NEW DELHI: When Lakshmi Niwas Mittal scripts a business plan, he takes the world as his stage. Currently penning his progress into oil kingdom, the steel king has set his sights on acquiring a 51% stake in the Port Harcourt refinery in Nigeria, where his joint venture with flagship explorer Oil and Natural Gas Corporation ONGC-Mittal Energy Ltd (OMEL) has two offshore exploration acreages.
Mittal is riding on his new-found bond with HPCL which is emerging as the preferred partner for getting into refining and gas business globally.
Mittal is becoming an equal partner in HPCL's Rs 16,000 crore Bhatinda refinery and will bring in $728 million for a 49% stake in the SPV for building the plant and laying a 1,100-km pipeline for wheeling crude from Mundra port.
"This will be the first 49% FDI in Indian refining industry and marks world investor confidence in the sector," petroleum secretary M S Srinivasan said on Tuesday.
Mittal is targetting his Nigerian refinery plan through a separate JV with HPCL. The emerging picture points to Mittal building up a portfolio across key oil industry segments. He has a vehicle for exploration in OMEL.
Separately, Mittal Investments has acquired Russian LUKOIL's 50% stake in an independent explorer with oilfields in Kazakhstan. Last week, OMEL joined the fray for Oman Oil's stake in Caspian Pipeline Consortium, a key western exit route for Kazakh oil.
A tie-up with HPCL brings refinery expertise and could open doors for Mittal's oil trading plans. This has been a sore point for Mittal as his second joint venture with ONGC, ONGC-Mittal Energy Services Ltd, has failed to take off due to lack of support from the state-owned partner.
"As a partner, Mittal could easily get into sourcing crude for the unit. That could be a possibility... why not if it is beneficial for the refinery... we are open to opportunitis when they arise. As of now, this (trading) is not on the agenda," HPCL's M B Lal told TOI.
If the partnership extends beyond Bhatinda to Vizag, it could also mean Mittal's entry in petrochemicals. Sanjay Dutta
NEW DELHI: When Lakshmi Niwas Mittal scripts a business plan, he takes the world as his stage. Currently penning his progress into oil kingdom, the steel king has set his sights on acquiring a 51% stake in the Port Harcourt refinery in Nigeria, where his joint venture with flagship explorer Oil and Natural Gas Corporation ONGC-Mittal Energy Ltd (OMEL) has two offshore exploration acreages.
Mittal is riding on his new-found bond with HPCL which is emerging as the preferred partner for getting into refining and gas business globally.
Mittal is becoming an equal partner in HPCL's Rs 16,000 crore Bhatinda refinery and will bring in $728 million for a 49% stake in the SPV for building the plant and laying a 1,100-km pipeline for wheeling crude from Mundra port.
"This will be the first 49% FDI in Indian refining industry and marks world investor confidence in the sector," petroleum secretary M S Srinivasan said on Tuesday.
Mittal is targetting his Nigerian refinery plan through a separate JV with HPCL. The emerging picture points to Mittal building up a portfolio across key oil industry segments. He has a vehicle for exploration in OMEL.
Separately, Mittal Investments has acquired Russian LUKOIL's 50% stake in an independent explorer with oilfields in Kazakhstan. Last week, OMEL joined the fray for Oman Oil's stake in Caspian Pipeline Consortium, a key western exit route for Kazakh oil.
A tie-up with HPCL brings refinery expertise and could open doors for Mittal's oil trading plans. This has been a sore point for Mittal as his second joint venture with ONGC, ONGC-Mittal Energy Services Ltd, has failed to take off due to lack of support from the state-owned partner.
"As a partner, Mittal could easily get into sourcing crude for the unit. That could be a possibility... why not if it is beneficial for the refinery... we are open to opportunitis when they arise. As of now, this (trading) is not on the agenda," HPCL's M B Lal told TOI.
If the partnership extends beyond Bhatinda to Vizag, it could also mean Mittal's entry in petrochemicals. Sanjay Dutta