- Indian Oil and BPCL delayed some maintenance to ensure steady fuel supply amid crisis
- Refineries operate at or above 100% capacity due to Strait of Hormuz closure impacts
- Nayara Energy will proceed with a month-long refinery shutdown starting April 9
Indian Oil Corp. and Bharat Petroleum Corp. have delayed routine maintenance at some of their units to ensure adequate supplies in the world's third-largest oil consumer, according to a senior government official.
“All refineries are operating at peak capacity, with some exceeding 100% utilization,” Sujata Sharma, a joint secretary at the oil ministry, said at a briefing in New Delhi on the Middle East crisis on Monday. She didn't specify which Indian Oil and BPCL plants had deferred maintenance.
The delay by India's state-run refiners comes as the nation grapples with a supply crunch following the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a key transit route for crude, liquefied petroleum gas and natural gas. The government has invoked emergency measures, directing refiners to maximize LPG output for safeguarding cooking fuel supplies for households.
India depends heavily on Middle Eastern supplies, with about half of its oil and more than 90% of LPG shipments sourced from the region, most of which transit through Hormuz. While US waivers on Russian crude purchases have eased supply pressures, securing alternatives for LPG remains challenging.
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However, Nayara Energy Ltd., a private company backed by Russian oil giant Rosneft PJSC, will proceed with a month-long shutdown from April 9, after deferring the maintenance for several months, Sharma said. The outage of Nayara's 400,000-barrels-a-day refinery on India's west coast is expected to tighten LPG availability, although the government plans to offset the shortfall through imports.
Indian Oil, the nation's largest refiner, operates nine plants with a combined capacity to process 1.4 million barrels of crude a day. Bharat Petroleum runs three facilities that can collectively refine 709,000 barrels per day.
New Delhi has negotiated with Iran to facilitate the safe passage of eight LPG cargoes — enough to cover roughly four days of national demand. During the weekend, the oil ministry said that refiners had secured Iranian crude too. Sharma declined to give details on how many barrels of Iranian crude had been procured and how the payments were being settled.
These are all commercial decisions, and also depend on currency conversion rates, she said.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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