India ready to help revive Nagarjuna oil refinery
NEW DELHI, June 6 (Reuters) - Energy-hungry India is ready to revive projects including the Nagarjuna Oil Refinery in the south of the country to boost its oil sector, oil minister Dharmendra Pradhan told a local television channel on Monday.
India, the world's fastest growing major economy, meets about three-quarters of its oil needs through imports and wants to expand its production and refining capacity to meet soaring demand.
The Nagarjuna refinery, in the state of Tamil Nadu, was in an advanced stage of constructionwhen it suffered severe damage in a cyclone in December 2011. The firm lacks the financial strength to continue work at the site.
Completion of the 120-Mbpd facility would help fill a looming shortage in processing capacity, but would require a cleanup of the site and extensive renovation work.
"The government will support any project, within the legal framework, to boost the country's oilsector. The Nagarjuna refinery is also one of these projects," Pradhan told CNBC's Hindi-language news channel in an interview.
Nagarjuna Oil Refinery earlier said it was in talks with prospective investors, including state-run firms like Indian Oil Corp, as well as the royal family of Saudi Arabia, to revive the facility.
In other comments, Pradhan played down reports that the country's biggest explorer, Oil and Natural Gas Corp, would be forced by the government to bail out Gujarat State Petroleum Corp (GSPC). He said it was a commercial matter and the boards of the firms would take a decision.
GSPC has been rapped by the federal auditor for investing about $3.5 B in an offshore block offIndia's eastern seaboard without achieving significant success.
(Reporting by Nidhi Verma and Sankalp Phartiyal; Editing by Douglas Busvine and Ed Davies)
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