ONGC considers buying out rest of petrochemical project

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
SINGAPORE: India's Oil and Natural Gas Corp plans to buy out the rest of a western Indian petrochemical project it does not already own and
launch a public offering if it fails to find a strategic partner for it, its head of finance said on Tuesday. ONGC Petro additions (OPaL),
majority-owned by ONGC, is primarily a polymer manufacturer, a chemical compound used in everything from textiles to plastics and
packaging. "We are looking at various options
Our first preference is to convert OPaL into a subsidiary by converting share warrants and debenture into equity if we don't get a strategic
partner," Subhash Kumar, ONGC's director of finance told Reuters
"Another option is to merge OPaL with ONGC." ONGC will decide by the end of its fiscal year on whether to make OPaL a subsidiary, he said
"After making it a subsidiary, it will take another two years to list the company," Kumar said. ONGC has long tried to bring in a strategic
partner in the petrochemical project but failed to strike a deal so far. Reuters reported last year that Saudi Basic Industries Corp
(SABIC), world's no
4 petrochemical company, had shown interest in buying about half of the project
SABIC's Kuwait Petroleum Corp had also shown interest in buying a stake
"Prospective partners had set certain terms for participation like selling petchem in their own brand," Kumar said, citing reasons talks to
sell a stake had not progressed
He did not name any companies with whom ONGC had held talks
ONGC's stake in the project could rise to 70 per cent if it converts 26 billion rupees of share warrants into equity and to about 93 per
cent if it also converted 77.78 billion rupees of debentures into shareholdings, Kumar said. ONGC owns 49.36 per cent of the project and gas
utility Gail (India) owns another 49.21 per cent
The remaining stake is held by Gujarat State Petroleum Corp, a state government-owned gas company, as of March. The petrochemical plant
currently produces 1.1 million tonnes of ethylene, 400,000 tonnes of propylene and other products - most of which are building blocks for
polymers - at Dahej in India's western state of Gujarat