Nigeria and India is in more trade relationship as india is set to import more crude oil from Nigeria.
Already one of the biggest contributors to the country’s oil imports,
Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said.
“Nigeria has
now agreed to increase the term contract from 1.7 million tonnes per
annum to three million tonnes in 2016,” Mr. Pradhan said on the
sidelines of the fourth India- Africa Hydrocarbon Summit in New Delhi.
Nigeria is the third-largest contributor to India’s oil imports,
accounting for 11.59 million tonnes (MT) in the first half of this
financial year, behind Saudi Arabia (19.56 MT) and Iraq (17.01 MT). The
benefit of a term contract is that not only does it assure a certain
quantity to be supplied but also ensures a stable price unlike oil
bought from spot markets whose price can fluctuate drastically. Apart
from Nigeria, Sudan also wants to increase its engagement with India.
India,
on its part, is also keen to diversify its oil import basket as Saudi
Arabia’s national oil and gas company recently announced that it would
be selling oil to its Asian customers, including India, at a premium of
$0.6 a barrel above the prevailing market price in February.
Credit: The Hindu
“They
(Sudan) have offered more oil blocks for exploration and asked for
Indian companies’ expertise to raise production from existing fields,”
he said. Sudan currently owes India $240 million for the oil it consumed
from the Greater Nile Oil Project in the country of which OVL owns 25
per cent. The modalities of repayment are being worked out, the Minister
added. Sudanese Oil Minister Mohamed Zayed Awad said he had offered
Blocks 8, 15 and 24 to OVL for exploration and urged the Indian company
to consider buying a stake in Block 17, which reportedly produces 7,000
barrels of oil per day.
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