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India's BPCL plans new refining, petchem jobs in next 5-7 years

India's Bharat Petroleum Corp plans to increase its incorporated refining and petrochemical capabilities within the next 5 to 7 years to fulfill growing energy demand, Chairman G. Krishnakumar told shareholders.

India's annual consumption of refined fuels and petrochemicals is expected to rise steadily by 4-5% and 7-8% in the 'foreseeable future', he stated.

This provides a tactical opportunity to expand refining capability alongside the development of integrated petrochemical complexes, Krishnakumar stated.

BPCL is checking out developing a new 180,000-300,000 barrels per day (bpd) oil refinery in southern Andhra Pradesh state or northern Uttar Pradesh state, a market source stated in July.

The new capacities will remain in addition to a task, worth 1.7 trillion rupees, that the company revealed previously this year to broaden its existing centers including refining, fuel selling, and petrochemicals.

BPCL earlier this year announced strategies to raise its refining capacity to 900,000 barrels daily and construct two new petrochemical projects at 310,000 bpd Kochi refinery in southern India and at 156,000 bpd Bina refinery in Central India.

The state-run company processes about 700,000 barrels of unrefined daily through its three refineries in India.

BPCL is targeting commissioning the petrochemical jobs at Kochi and Bina by 2027 and 2028, Krishnakumar said.

In addition to the petrochemical tasks, BPCL is likewise expanding Bina refinery's capability to 300,000 bpd by 2026.

BPCL prepares to add 4,000 brand-new fuel retail outlets in India, raising its total to 26,000 in 5 years, Krishnakumar stated.

The company has actually set a target to end net carbon emission through its operation by 2040. To meet the net absolutely no objective, it is investing 1 trillion rupees into creating eco-friendly power, green hydrogen, compressed biogas, carbon capture utilisation and storage, to offset its carbon emissions.

It aims to develop 2 gigawatts of renewable resource capability by 2025 and 10 GW by 2035, the chairman stated.

(source: Reuters)