"With land acquisition becoming one of the biggest hurdles in new projects, we may look at further increasing the Kochi capacity to 22 MT at a later stage as we have enough land there even after the ongoing Rs 16,5000 crore work," BPCL Chairman and Managing Director S Varadarajan told reporters, without offering a timeline or the quantum of investment.
On the soon to be completed Kochi expansion from 9.5 MT to 15.5 MT, Varadarajan, who will be retiring this week, said, "We are on course to finish the work on the last unit by December and commission the Rs 16,500-crore Kochi refinery expansion project in the fourth quarter. Once completed, this will be the largest refinery in the public sector."
Varadarajan, who was talking to the media after the AGM here, also announced up to Rs 55,000 crore investment in refining capacity over the next four years, while the total investment will be Rs 1 trillion.
While the largest player IndianOil has a 15-MT refinery at Paradip in Odisha, Reliance' 33 MT plant in Jamnagar, Gujarat is the largest not only in the country but globally.
More From This Section
The third largest state-run oil marketer BPCL, with 23 per cent market share, currently has four refineries -- in Mumbai, Kochi, Bina in Madhya Pradesh in joint venture with Oman Oil Company and Numaligarh in Assam.
As part of expansion of the 50-year-old Kochi refinery, the company will also be setting up a green biofuel refinery to produce ethanol by converting agricultural and municipal waste, he said.
Varadarajan also said the company will soon start work on
the petchem project in Kochi, having received all the approvals, and will be able to complete it by 2018.
When asked about the technology partner of the project, the chairman said the company is developing it on its own.
It can be noted that the project had suffered a big setback after Korean chemicals major LG Chem walked out of the joint venture in August 2013, citing adverse international environment for large investments.
BPCL and LG Chem had signed an agreement in July 2012 to set up a SAP speciality chemicals plant in Kochi. Following this, BPCL tried in vain to buy outright the critical technology to make speciality propylene derivatives and SAP (super absorbent polymers), as there are only five companies in the world which have this technology.
BPCL expects its average GRM (gross refining margin, or the difference between the price of a barrel of crude oil and the price at which a refiner sells the refined products) to jump to USD 5-6 a barrel post the commissioning from next fiscal, Finance Director P Balasubramanian said.
He added there will be a USD 1.5-2.0 per barrel addition to GRM from the plant alone.
Balasubramanian also said there was no major cost overruns for the expansion project, except for Rs 150 crore primarily due to currency fluctuations.