IndianOil-AOD, the company's North East division, will also start moving a convoy of 20 tankers by the end of this month to the North Eastern state for the first time via Bangladesh to avoid the dilapidated NH-44 in Assam.
"Apart from exploring new routes to supply fuel for ending the crisis in Tripura, we are looking to increase the storage capacity in the state. We are working on both the possibilities so that common people do not suffer there," Indian Oil Corporation Executive Director (IndianOil-AOD) Dipankar Ray told PTI.
"The POL depot will incur an investment of around Rs 500 crore, while Rs 143 crore have been estimated for setting up the bottling plant over the next 2-3 years. The investment includes land cost as well and the land parcels have already been identified for both the units," Ray said.
In Tripura, the company has a POL depot at Dharmanagar with a capacity of around 6,000 kilo litre (kl) and an LPG bottling plant at Bishalgarh with a capacity of 30,000 million tonnes per annum in double shifts.
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"The new POL depot will have an installed capacity of 32,000 kl, while that for the bottling plant will be 60,000 million tonnes a year, expandable up to 1,20,000 million tonnes," he added.
During monsoon in May-June this year, Tripura faced unprecedented fuel crisis as supply was badly hit due to pathetic road condition of NH-44 at Barak Valley in Assam and thousands of tankers were stranded on roads for weeks.
Informing that NF Railway has made two trips with oil
tankers so far, he said the company will use this mode only in extreme cases.
"Meanwhile, we identified a road route via Bangladesh. Within just one and half month, everything is finalised and we have already signed an agreement with concerned authorities in Bangladesh. We will send the first batch of 20 tankers to Tripura by the end of this month," Ray said.
The distance for transporting POL and LPG from IOC's Betkuchi depot in Guwahati to Dharmanagar depot in Tripura via Bangladesh will be 366 km, including 126 km in the neighbouring nation, against 386 km long-route through the Barak Valley.
"As per the agreement, we will pay 1.02 Bangladeshi Taka per tonne per km along with 200 Bangladeshi Taka for entry and exit charges. The MoU also says that at any point of time, not more than 160 tankers will be plying on Bangladeshi roads," the Executive Director said.
The company will have to pay around 1,500 Bangladeshi Taka to the neighbouring nation per vehicle, which will be about Rs 1,300 in Indian currency.
Ray said the agreement is valid till September this year, but will be reviewed and renewed after examining the success of the process in one month.