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”We have started selling to oil marketing companies. This will help to create space that we will then offer for leasing,” Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Ltd (ISPRL) CEO H P S Ahuja said on Thursday.
As much as 0.3 million tonnes of Upper Zakum crude stored at the Mangaluru cavern has already been emptied and the remaining 0.45 million tonnes will be sold by the end of the year.
ISPRL will lease out Mangalore cavern of 0.75 million tonnes capacity to state-owned Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Ltd (MRPL).
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Mangaluru strategic petroleum reserve (SPR) has two caverns of 0.75 million tonnes capacity each. ADNOC of the UAE has stored Upper Zakum crude at Mangaluru’s second cavern, Ahuja said.
About 0.15 million tonnes of crude oil from Vizag cavern has also been sold to HPCL.
The sale follows the government decision earlier this year to liberalize its oil policy by allowing ISPRL to commercialize up to 50 per cent of its reserves — under which ISPRL can use 20 per cent of the volumes for trading and lease out the remaining 30 per cent of the capacity.
The government had bought the crude when international oil prices had crashed in April/May last year to USD 19 per barrel and it is now earning a profit on selling it when prices have risen to USD 80.
In its first phase, India set up SPRs at three locations with a combined capacity of 5.33 million tonnes — 1.33 million tonnes at Visakhapatnam, 1.5 million tonnes at Mangaluru and 2.5 million tonnes at Padur in Karnataka.
In the second phase, a storage capacity of 6.5 million tonnes of SPRs at two locations: 4 million tonnes at Chandikhol in Odisha and another 2.5 million tonnes at Padur will be built.
It will be set up on a public-private partnership model, Singh said.
The first phase can cater to almost 9.5 days of India’s crude oil requirements. The second phase will add another 12 days of requirements.
He said the second phase will cost USD 1.4 billion and will take 6-7 years to build.