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Rosneft plays a key role in energy dialogue with India
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IANS | 21 Dec, 2021
Russian energy company Rosneft is playing a pivotal role in the energy
dialogue between Moscow and New Delhi, actively developing an integrated
format of cooperation with Indian partners.
Russia is India's
longstanding and time-tested partner. There is regular high-level
interaction between the two countries - heads of the two countries hold
annual meetings, and there are other mechanisms of political
interaction.
In the meantime, India's fast-growing economy is
demanding more and more energy resources; hence it is important to
systematically develop cooperation in the energy sector as well. In that
regard, India's authorities show interest in Rosneft's unique
low-carbon Vostok Oil project that produces low-sulphur oil.
As
of today, the volume of mutual investments in the projects with the
participation of Rosneft and Indian partners exceeded $17 billion. This
is more than half of the total volume of accumulated Russian-Indian
investments at the moment.
India has been one of Rosneft's key
strategic partners for many years, and the investment cooperation
between Rosneft and its Indian partners is quite effective. It is
evident by the example of many joint projects in Russia and India. Since
2016, Rosneft, together with a consortium of Indian investors, has been
developing the Vankor field. It is the largest field discovered and
commissioned in Russia in the last twenty-five years. The project is a
benchmark as it has become the basis for building an integral format of
cooperation between Rosneft and Indian partners.
Another joint
production project in Russia - Taas-Yuryakh Neftegazodobycha - is an
example of a Eurasian hub that involves representatives of India (a
consortium of investors) and Britain (BP) in its development.
Since
2001, the Indian company ONGC Videsh Ltd. has been a participant in the
Sakhalin-1 project (the other shareholders are Rosneft, ExxonMobil, and
Sodeco of Japan). In 2020 the project produced 12.4 million tonnes of
oil and condensate and supplied more than 2.4 billion cubic meters of
gas to consumers.
These assets are the most successful
international projects of Rosneft. They allowed the company to become a
leader in investment cooperation between the two countries.
Since
2017, Rosneft has been a co-owner of Nayara Energy, which owns Vadinar,
one of the largest and most high-tech refineries in India. The purchase
of this asset is the most significant foreign investment in the Indian
economy. This investment is justified and strategically flawless for the
company: the investors were focused on the dynamically developing
Indian domestic market with one of the world's highest growth rates.
Nayara
Energy now also owns one of India's largest networks of gas stations,
and during the time that Rosneft has been a shareholder of the company,
the network has almost doubled in size. Today there are more than 6,200
filling stations there. It is also crucial that Rosneft and its partners
are developing petrochemical production at the refinery: at the end of
November, Nayara announced the laying of the foundation stone for a $750
million polypropylene plant. And this is just the beginning - at the
next stage, the production capacity of the refinery may be doubled. All
this will enable us to meet the growing demands of the Indian market.
All these examples are a perfect illustration of how successful the Russia-India energy dialogue can be.
It
is important to understand that this is far from the limit. So far,
Russia is not India's main partner in the energy sector, although there
are all opportunities to do so, given the potential of the Northern Sea
Route. Plus, the two countries share and similar positions with regard
to the energy transition to a low-carbon economy.
Due to such
potential, it is not surprising that the Indians are one of the most
probable investors in the Vostok Oil project in Taimyr. Indian investors
are clearly interested in the project, and high-ranking people from the
Indian government have spoken about it more than once publicly.
The
resource base of Vostok Oil comprises over 6 billion tons of premium
low-sulfur oil, which makes it the largest project in the Russian and
world economy. In addition, it is one of the leading low-carbon projects
in the world - Vostok Oil's carbon footprint is 75 per cemt lower than
that of other major oil projects. Moreover, the proximity of the project
fields to the unique Northern Sea Route transport corridor gives it an
undeniable logistical advantage in supplying oil to markets in the
Asia-Pacific region, including India.
In this context, Indian
partners' interest in Russian shipbuilding is also not accidental. In
September, Prime Minister Modi announced at the Eastern Economic Forum
in Vladivostok that one of India's largest shipyards had become a
partner of the Zvezda shipbuilding complex in the Far East.
Should
Indian companies take part in Rosneft's two landmark projects - Vostok
Oil and Zvezda Shipbuilding Complex - the technological chain will be
finally formed. Then the energy dialogue could become no less important
as a basis for bilateral cooperation than political and
military-technical agreements.
This means that the partners are
interested in creating value in all links of the production chain:
exploration and production within the framework of the Vostok Oil
project, building a fleet for the transportation of hydrocarbons as part
of the SSC Zvezda, oil refining, and sales of oil products in the
Indian domestic market and in the South Asian region.
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