Total, RIL Unlikely To Bid For BPCL

Government is looking to sell 53.29 percent stake in BPCL to a strategic investor in biggest privatisation bid in Indian history.

PTI
The BPCL is displayed at a fuel station in Mumbai. (Photographer: Vivek Prakash/Bloomberg)

French energy company Total SA as well as oil-to-telecom conglomerate Reliance Industries Ltd. are unlikely to bid for acquiring India's second biggest oil refining and marketing company Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd., while U.K.'s BP plc said it wants to see what is on offer before deciding to bid.

The government is looking at selling its 53.29 percent stake in BPCL to a strategic investor in the biggest privatisation bid in the history of India. BPCL has a market capitalisation of Rs 1.05 lakh crore and its acquisition together with the mandatory open offer to minority shareholders would cost upwards of Rs 82,000 crore.

On a visit to New Delhi to attend an industry conference, Total Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Patrick Pouyanne said the company was interested in investing in downstream petrochemicals and retailing market in India but was "not interested in Indian refineries".

Also Read: Way Clear For BPCL Privatisation As Its Nationalisation Act Was Repealed In 2016

The French giant announced buying 37.4 percent stake in Adani Gas - which retails compressed natural gas to automobiles and piped cooking gas to households besides developing import terminals and a national chain of petrol stations.

Reliance, which operates the world's biggest refinery complex at single site, too is unlikely to bid as it is already in talks to sell out a fifth of its oil-to-chemicals business to Saudi Aramco to cut down high debt it had taken for its foray in telecom business, sources said.

It is unclear if Saudi Aramco, which is keen to enter the world's fastest growing energy market, will bid alone or with some other partner such as Abu Dhabi National Oil Company.

BP Chief Executive Bob Dudley said it was "early days" for the privatisation of BPCL. "We need to see what is on offer," he said.

On Sept. 30, a group of secretaries on disinvestment gave its approval for to sell government's entire 53.29 percent stake in BPCL, which is likely to be completed by March 31, next year.

BPCL is the country's the second-largest state-owned refining and marketing firm, accounting for 15 percent of total installed refining capacity. In addition, it markets 21 percent of petroleum products consumed in the country by volume as of March this year.

It operates four refineries at Mumbai, Kochi in Kerala, Bina in Madhya Pradesh and Numaligarh in Assam with a combined capacity to convert 38.3 million tonne of crude oil into fuel. It has 15,078 petrol pumps and 6,004 liquified petroleum gas distributors.

India has a total refining capacity of 249.4 million tonne and 65,554 petrol pumps and 24,026 LPG distributors.

Also Read: BPCL Privatisation To Prompt A Steep Downgrade, Says Moody’s

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