India: MRPL to Restore Petrol Retail Plans
|
|
|
|
Wednesday, 28 January 2009 |
|
With the ministry of petroleum and natural gas planning to free retail
fuel prices from government control and link them to global crude oil
prices, Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Ltd (MRPL), a subsidiary
of state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corporation, is reviving plans to
set up fuel retail outlets, a senior company executive has confirmed.
The company plans to roll out 500 outlets, each of which
will cost about Rs 2 crore, and 50 to begin with. The company had to
shelve retail plans because the government declined to support it by
subscribing to oil bonds. These bonds are key to the survival of the
three government-owned companies that control the fuel retail market —
Indian Oil Corporation, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum — and
sell petrol, diesel, kerosene and LPG at subsidised prices.
Without oil bonds, it is not possible for public or private players to
compete with these three companies. Lat year, Reliance Industries
decided to close two-thirds of its 1,400 petrol pumps around the
country citing unfair price competition from the government-supported
giants. MRPL operates a 9.69 million tonne refinery at Mangalore in
Karnataka.
Other players with fuel marketing rights include Reliance , Shell,
Essar, ONGC and Numaligarh Refinery. Like MRPL, several are planning a
re-entry.
PetrolWorld 270109
|