Saudi Aramco Eyes Major Stake in New $11 Billion Indian Refinery
Saudi Aramco is poised to buy a 20% stake in a new refinery that India’s state-owned refiner Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited (BPCL) plans to build with a total investment of about $11 billion, Indian news outlet Business Standard reports.
BPCL plans to have the refinery built at the Ramayapatnam port in the state of Andhra Pradesh on the east coast of southern India. The refinery is planned to have a processing capacity of between 180,000 and 240,000 barrels per day (bpd).
The Indian company, which is the country’s second-biggest state refiner with 706,000 bpd of crude processing capacity, plans to sell a 30–40% equity stake to outside investors. This stake would include a 20% interest to Saudi Aramco, a nearly 10% stake to Oil India Ltd (OIL), and another 4–5% equity stake to interested banks, according to a senior BPCL official who spoke to Business Standard.
Earlier this year, BPCL secured the land for the new refinery. The Andhra Pradesh government allocated 6,000 acres for the refinery and petrochemicals project, which is expected to cost about $11 billion (967 billion Indian rupees). The state government has asked BPCL to launch commercial operations at the refinery by January 2029, per the order cited by Reuters.
Currently, BPCL operates three refineries in India. The company and other Indian refiners are looking to boost their crude processing and petrochemicals capacity to meet growing demand in the world’s third-largest crude oil importer.
Saudi Arabia, for its part, looks to lock in future term sales for its crude in the top Asian markets, which are set to continue driving global demand growth in the coming years. India has even surpassed China as the single biggest driver of demand growth.
Sources in India told Reuters earlier this year that Aramco was in discussions to invest in two planned refineries in India.
Saudi Aramco is discussing buying a stake in the BPCL refining and petrochemical complex in south India, and is in separate talks with Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited (ONGC) for a proposed refinery in the Gujarat state on India’s west coast, the sources told Reuters.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
Saudi Aramco is poised to buy a 20% stake in a new refinery that India’s state-owned refiner Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited (BPCL) plans to build with a total investment of about $11 billion, Indian news outlet Business Standard reports.
BPCL plans to have the refinery built at the Ramayapatnam port in the state of Andhra Pradesh on the east coast of southern India. The refinery is planned to have a processing capacity of between 180,000 and 240,000 barrels per day (bpd).
The Indian company, which is the country’s second-biggest state refiner with 706,000 bpd of crude processing capacity, plans to sell a 30–40% equity stake to outside investors. This stake would include a 20% interest to Saudi Aramco, a nearly 10% stake to Oil India Ltd (OIL), and another 4–5% equity stake to interested banks, according to a senior BPCL official who spoke to Business Standard.
Earlier this year, BPCL secured the land for the new refinery. The Andhra Pradesh government allocated 6,000 acres for the refinery and petrochemicals project, which is expected to cost about $11 billion (967 billion Indian rupees). The state government has asked BPCL to launch commercial operations at the refinery by January 2029, per the order cited by Reuters.
Currently, BPCL operates three refineries in India. The company and other Indian refiners are looking to boost their crude processing and petrochemicals capacity to meet growing demand in the world’s third-largest crude oil importer.
Saudi Arabia, for its part, looks to lock in future term sales for its crude in the top Asian markets, which are set to continue driving global demand growth in the coming years. India has even surpassed China as the single biggest driver of demand growth.
Sources in India told Reuters earlier this year that Aramco was in discussions to invest in two planned refineries in India.
Saudi Aramco is discussing buying a stake in the BPCL refining and petrochemical complex in south India, and is in separate talks with Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited (ONGC) for a proposed refinery in the Gujarat state on India’s west coast, the sources told Reuters.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
Investor Hesitation Stalls India's Offshore Oil Push
India has once again kicked the can down the road on its biggest oil and gas licensing round, extending the deadline for bids under OALP-X to February 18. It is the fourth extension since the round was launched with much fanfare during India Energy Week in February, and it says a lot about the gap between ambition and investor appetite.
OALP-X is not a small offering quietly tucked away in some dark corner of the upstream segment. It is the largest acreage round India has ever put on the table under its Hydrocarbon Exploration and Licensing Policy, covering nearly 192,000 square kilometers across 13 sedimentary basins. The mix is heavily offshore: ultra-deepwater, deepwater, shallow water, and a smaller slice of onshore acreage. In August, New Delhi had already pushed the deadline to October, citing the need to give bidders more time. Then came another extension to December. Now it is February.
Officially, there is no explanation this time around. But unofficially, the reasons are the usual suspects. Investor participation has been lacking, weighed down by regulatory complexity, tax burdens, and lingering uncertainty over drilling rules and fiscal terms. A recent increase in the GST rate on exploration and production inputs did not help, nor did the reality that the government take can reach as much as 60 to 70 percent of upstream revenues.
That is awkward timing for a country that depends on imports for more than 85 percent of its oil and wants that number lower, not higher. India’s crude import dependence hit a record in the last fiscal year, even as demand continues to climb and domestic production stays flat. The government knows this, which is why it has been courting foreign majors and talking up frontier basins like the Andaman offshore, sometimes with Guyana-scale comparisons that raise eyebrows.
There is interest on paper. Petrobras has signed letters of intent with Indian state producers. Exxon, Chevron, BP, and TotalEnergies have all inked cooperation agreements. But interest doesn’t necessarily translate into bids, and bids do not equal rigs in the water.
Repeated deadline extensions are so far managing to keep the round alive, despite signaling hesitation.
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com

