Oil and Natural Gas Corporation is not looking for a stake in the Canadian company PetroKazakhstan. Shareholders of PetroKazakh approved the $4.18-billion takeover bid from China National Petroleum Corporation, China's largest oil company, late on Tuesday. |
"ONGC is keenly interested in Central Asia, especially Kazakhstan, for oil and gas properties. We'll be happy to negotiate for long-term oil and gas assets in Kazakhstan." said ONGC Chairman and Managing Director Subir Raha on sidelines of a seminar in New Delhi today. |
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ONGC is considering buying oil and gas assets in Kazakhstan, he said. |
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CNPC had bought the stake in PetroKazakh in a biding round where Petroleum Minister Mani Shankar Aiyar had alleged "foul play". |
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Owing to pressure from the Kazakh government, CNPC agreed to sell a 33-per cent stake in PetroKazakhstan to Kazakhstan's state-owned oil company KazMunaiGaz for about $1.4 billion. |
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CNPC will split ownership of an oil refinery equally with the Kazakh company and has agreed to process a certain amount of crude through the Shymkent facility. |
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On tie-up with a foreign company for its proposed 15-million tonne refinery at Mangalore, Raha said, "As of date, we have no plans to have foreign participation in our proposed refinery at Mangalore." |
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The refinery at Mangalore will be in addition to the existing Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Ltd, which is a subsidiary of ONGC. MRPL's refinery has a capacity of 9.7 million tonnes per annum. It is in the process of expanding capacity to 18 million tonnes. |
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The new refinery will cost around Rs 11 billion per million tonne or around Rs 165 billion, Raha said. |
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