IOC to buy up to 50 pc stake in Mundra LNG terminal

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

State-owned Corp (IOC) today said it will acquire up to 50 per cent stake in Adani Group-backed Mundra LNG import terminal in for an estimated Rs 750 crore.

The board of India's largest firm gave "in-principle approval for acquiring up to 50 per cent equity in GSPL LNG Ltd, which is setting up a 5 million tons per annum LNG terminal at in Gujarat," the company said in a statement.


GSPL LNG Ltd is a joint venture of State Petroleum Corp and Ltd. GSPL LNG Ltd will hold the remaining 50 per cent stake in the LNG terminal that is nearing completion.

Adani and GSPC are equal partners in GSPL LNG Ltd.

While the company did not give the cost, an official said roughly 30 per cent of the Rs 5,040 crore project cost is equity and would pay for half of it.

A final number would be arrived at after valuation exercise is completed, he added.

said the LNG terminal would be commissioned in the fourth quarter of 2017-18 fiscal year. It will have receipt, storage and re-gasification facilities for liquefied natural gas (LNG) and will be connected to State Petronet Ltd's (GSPL) existing pipelines network at Anjaar (Gujarat).

As the second largest natural gas player in the country, is making significant investments in natural gas infrastructure and marketing in line with the country's changing energy mix.

"We already have investments across the gas value chain, from LNG import terminals to city gas distribution networks, the major among them being a 5 million tons LNG import terminal at Kamarajar port near Chennai, scheduled for commissioning in 2018-19," Chairman Sanjiv Singh said.

Mundra would be the second LNG project of Adani where is investing.

has taken 39 per cent stake in the proposed 5 million tons a year LNG import terminal at Dhamra in Odisha. Adani Group has 50 per cent in the project and the remaining 11 per cent is with state-owned gas utility Ltd.

When GSPL LNG put up on offer stake in the Mundra LNG project 3-4 years back, eight firms including GAIL had expressed interest in buying the stake but only three were shortlisted.

Besides IOC, Gas Solutions Pvt Ltd, the equal joint venture between the Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries and Europe's second largest firm BP, and state-owned and Natural Gas (ONGC) were shortlisted.

Mundra terminal, which is to be financed in a debt to equity ratio of 70:30, is expandable up to 10 million tons per annum in near future.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)