India's third biggest crude oil refiner, Hindustan Petroleum Corp (HPCL), plans to expand its refining capacity to more than 60 million tonnes annually, or about 1.2 million barrels of oil per day by 2030, according to a senior company official.
This will not only help the company fill the yawning gap between the volume it refines and the volume it markets through its retail outlets, but also help in meeting the burgeoning fuel demand in the country, said HPCL Chairman Mukesh Kumar Surana at a conference late on Thursday.
While Hindustan Petroleum, which is largely known as a marketer of fuel products, currently sells 34.20 million tonnes of fuel products every year through its retail outlets and bulk sales, its refining capacity is only about half that.
According to a 2015 report, by the International Energy Agency, India will require up to 329 million tonnes of oil products annually by 2030. As of last year, India consumed 183 million tonnes of fuel products, government data showed.
Analysts have often pointed out the heavy reliance on outside purchase of fuel products as a double-edged sword for the company. While HPCL is not directly exposed to crude oil fluctuations, it misses out on the refining margins that its peers clock.
"We would like to have 60 plus (million tonnes) refining capacity by 2030," Surana said.
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Separately, a company official said the internal target is to have not more than 15 per cent reliance on outside purchase of fuel by 2030.
A major chunk of this refining capacity is expected to come from a joint-venture (JV) project for a 60-million-tonne proposed refinery in the western state of Maharashtra.
Hindustan Petroleum will own a 25 per cent stake in this JV, while India's biggest state-owned refiner Indian Oil and No 2 player Bharat Petroleum will hold 50 per cent and 25 per cent stakes, respectively.
India's Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said in June that it would also like to bring in a strategic partner in the refinery and Saudi Arabian oil giant Saudi Arabia Oil has shown interest in it.
To meet the 60-million-tonne target the company will have to set up yet another greenfield refinery, HPCL's director of refineries, B K Namdeo, said.