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Saudi Aramco looks for Investment Opportunities in India, says CEO

Saudi Aramco, the world’s largest oil-exporting company, is looking for investment opportunities in India amid a surge in crude demand in the South Asian country, its president and chief executive has said.

 

In terms of crude imports, both China and India – two large oil-consuming countries – have surpassed pre-pandemic levels, Amin Nasser said during the Opec International Seminar in Vienna last week.

 

China’s crude imports hit a record 16 million barrels per day in March as its economy recovers following the lifting of Covid-19 restrictions earlier this year, the International Energy Agency said in its April oil market report.

 

China was the largest importer of oil from Saudi Arabia last year, buying about 1.75 million barrels per day. In March, an Aramco unit acquired a 10 per cent stake in Shenzhen-listed Rongsheng Petrochemical in a deal valued at $3.6 billion to expand its refining operations in China.

 

In December, Aramco and China Petroleum and Chemical Corporation signed an initial agreement to build a refinery and a petrochemicals plant in China. The 320,000-bpd refinery and 1.5 million tonnes-per-year petrochemical cracker complex will be operational by the end of 2025.

 

Mr Nasser said that rising crude demand from China and India would lead to an “imbalance” in the oil market amid underinvestment in new oil and gas projects. “Their priority is raising the [living] standards for their people and sustainability comes next. In Asia alone, there are 150 million people with no electricity,” Mr Nasser said.

 

While policies such as the Inflation Reduction Act in the US and similar initiatives in the EU will support energy transition in those countries, such incentives will not work for developing economies, Mr Nasser said.

 

It is expected to spur about $3 trillion of investment in renewable energy technology, according to Goldman Sachs. The International Energy Agency and Opec expect the oil market to tighten in the second half of the year, supported by a rebound in crude demand in Asia and Opec+ production cuts.

 

However, Brent, the benchmark for two thirds of the world’s oil, has lost nearly 11 per cent of its value since the beginning of the year on economic slowdown concerns and resilient Russian crude supply.

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