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Indian Refining Sector
Presented By-
Arunav barooah-R590210005
Harshit Mehrotra-R590210010
Kumar Siddhartha-R590210011
Varun Kr.Dwivedi-R590210023
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Indian current refinery scenario Development of refinery sector Refinery capacity growth in India Challenges in refinery scenario in
India. Future prospects in India. What need to be done for
expansion.
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During the last 50 years ; The country witnessed remarkable growth in Refining facilities
Refineries growing from 1 to 20 in number ; processing capacity increasing from 0.25 MMTPA at the time of independence to 178 MMTPA in Yr. 2010.
At present there are 20 refineries operating in the country (17 in public sector and 3 in Pvt. Sector)
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India : Product Demand & Refining Capacity
• India will continue to be product surplus Import/Export requirement for crude/products to be quite substantial
Surplus refining capacity is expected to increase further by 2030
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At the time of Independence, India had only 1 very small capacity refinery at Digboi. Cap. 0.25 MMTPA.
First decade of Independence (1947-57) saw the establishment of 3 Coastal Refineries by Multinational oil companies operating in India at that time i.e Burmah Shell, Stanvac and Caltex. Burmah Shell and Stanvac set up their refineries in Bombay while Caltex did so at Vizag. Total Refining capacity in India raised to 4.8 MMTPA
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Second decade (1957–67) witnessed the commissioning of 3 fully owned public sector oil Refineries – at Barauni, Guwahati & Koyali. These 3 inland Refineries were set-up with co-operation from Romania & Russia essentially to process the indigenous crude – Guwahati & Barauni for Assam crude and Koyali (Vadodara) for Gujarat crude.
Total Refining capacity = 12.7 MMTPA
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Second decade (1957–67) witnessed the commissioning of 3 fully owned public sector oil Refineries – at Barauni, Guwahati & Koyali. These 3 inland Refineries were set-up with co-operation from Romania & Russia essentially to process the indigenous crude –Guwahati & Barauni for Assam crude and Koyali (Vadodara) for Gujarat crude.
Total Refining capacity = 12.7 MMTPA
Next 10 yrs. (1967-77) witnessed establishment of 2 Refineries – one at Chennai with participation of American & Iranian companies and other in public sector at Haldia IOC with assistance from Romania and France.Total Refining Capacity = 22.9 MMTPA
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Period (1977-97) saw the cominiononing of 2 more Refineries in Public sector : one at Bangangaion; which was the first Refinery-cum-Petrochemical unit in India, and the other Refinery at Mathura was setup in 1982 with the assistance of Soviets.
Major expansions of the Coastal Refineries at Mumbai, Cochin, Madras and Vizag was also completed in the period.
Total Refining capacity = 47 MMTPA
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During the 8th plan period ; domestic Refining capacity has been raised to about 62 MMTPA. The highest priority has been accorded to low cost expansion of the refining capacity and a new Refinery at Mangalore (3MMTPA) has been commissioned.
The period 1997-2002 saw commissioning of 2 more Refineries in Public sector (Panipat and NRL) and one in Pvt. Sector (at Jamnagar of RIL) taking the total Refining capacity in the country to about 115 MMTPA
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India : Refining Capacity Growth• As on April 1, 2010, India has a total refining capacity of 184.29 MMTPA
including the newly commissioned refinery at Jamnagar) and expected to increase by 240 MMTPA in next one year.
• Current export is around 51 million ton.
• 18 out of the total 20 refineries in India belong to PSUs (with a capacity of a little over 59%)
• In the last few years, the Indian refinery sector has witnessed continuous capacity additions and the trend will continue in near future also; Projected capacity by 2017 is 302 MMTPA
MMTPA
* XIth Plan Projection
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India : Refining Capacity Growth
Expansion Plans in India
Total Capacity , MMTPA
Refinery X plan
(2007)
XI plan
(2012)
XII plan
(2017)
IOC 60.2 81.4 94.7
HPC 13 32.9 32.9
BPC 22.8 30.8 30.8
MRPL 9.69 15 45
RPL 33 62 62
Essar 10.5 14 32
Nagarjuna 6 6
Total 148.9 240.9 302.2
As surplus products increases Coastal refineries will be forced to export more
Source : MoP&NG12
Oil Demand & Availability
• Widening gap between product demand and crude production from indigenous
sources; Heavy dependence on Imports
• Bridging the gap - Oil Equity abroad and fresh finds under New Exploration &
Licensing Policy
• Need for huge investments in refining, pipelines & Marketing infrastructure
Source: XIth Plan Document
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Present approach of Indian Refiners
• Indian refiners are adding complex units like HCU, DCU, High Severity FCC , Alkylation, Isomerization units in order to increase value addition and product grades
• All new projects typically have Nelson Complexity index ranging from 10-14
• The switch to cleaner fuels due to newer fuel specifications led to addition of huge hydrotreating capacities
• Many refiners are adding units to meet BS III/BS IV grade auto fuels from April 2010.
• The Auto Fuel Policy is driving investment in clean fuel technology.
• Current export of higher sulfur HSD to ME/SEA may undergo corresponding shift to low sulfur exports
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India’s Refining Expansion Options
• Bottoms upgrade
DCU with hydrotreating facilities
HCU once through with high severity FCC(petrochemical)
• Other products
Naphtha to petrochemicals
Kerosene fractions to LAB
• Product quality upgrade
Euro III & Euro IV
Coastal refineries to match variety of specs abroad
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India as a Global Refining Hub
Asian Export Markets for India
• Oil Refining is considered to be a strategic industry by most Asian nations
• Largest growth is in China and India. Both likely to be self-sufficient. Any
potential gap is therefore temporary
• Best export opportunities with structural supply shortage
Vietnam new builds may lag demand
Indonesia funding limited for new domestic refineries
OtherSri Lanka, Bangladesh, Philippines, Pakistan.
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India as a Global Refining Hub Contd...
India Cost Competitiveness for Asia
• Local supply is generally most competitive
• Low energy & tax, freight economics make ME most competitive
exporter.
• India Capex and opex competitive offset by tax and transport dis-
economies
• Export potential to 6-8 countries Indonesia, China, Vietnam,
Malaysia, Bangladesh, SriLanka, Philippines
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India as a Strategic location…
• Located in the major maritime route from Middle East to Far East
• Western and south-western coast - as transit landfall for middle-east crude
• Established refineries on western coast
• Geographical advantage to serve western and eastern markets
• Strong domestic demand provides an effective edge against fluctuations in
exports
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All Crudes can not be processed in all refinery Process units configuration different Physical properties – Viscosity Very low / high products yield
Flooding / dry up / heat integration High metal content ( Ni, V)
Catalyst de-activation All crudes can not make all products
Asphaltenes for Bitumen ATF from BH Crude
All products can not be exported Infrastructure requirement
All products can not be imported Infrastructure requirement
Challenges : Refinery Operation
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Petroleum Ref./Upes/GCT/July-05/ Mod-15/17
• Future Refinery options
The challenges for the future are :
Crude oil is becoming heavier and higher in sulphur and metal content.
Reduced growth in fuel oil demand.
. Stringent environmental regulations for cleaner products/ processes and
demand for quality product.
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India is located in the major maritime route from Middle East to Far East. So, the western and south –western coast of India can be used as transit landfall for Middle East crude.
Ideal location for creating a hub or clusters of refineries and developing associated infrastructure
Cost competitiveness driven by lower manufacturing wages
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Low capital and cash operating costs compared to developed countries
Access to large, technically skilled manufacturing base and workforce
Indigenous procurement
The SEZ act 2006 is a bold initiative from government of India and this has opened opportunities for potential players to invest in refinery capacity addition and other assets
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Invest more on port facilities, Shore tank farms and pipeline assets for handling liquid cargoes.
• Incentivizes private & public-private participation in asset creation.
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•
Build in capabilities to produce outputs in line with the stringent fuel norms evolving in high demand markets.• Upgrade and modernize the refineries to meet the fuel quality
During the 8th plan period ; domestic Refining capacity has been raised to about 62
MMTPA. The highest priority has been accorded to low cost expansion of the refining capacity and a new Refinery at Mangalore (3MMTPA) has been commissioned.
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Encourage large scale private/foreign participation in the refining sector.
Incentivize existing refineries to tap export markets.
Government should welcome the FDI in refinery sector in India.
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Thank You
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