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Essar Global Ltd., which has interests in energy,
steel and telecommunications, plans to spend a
record $2 billion on developing oil and gas fields
in India, Myanmar and Nigeria to benefit from
high fuel prices.
The Mumbai-based group will use about $200 million
of its own cash and borrow the rest for the three-year
spending plan, Shishir Agrawal, chief executive
officer of Essar Exploration & Production
Ltd., said in an interview in the city yesterday.
Output from fields in India may be leveraged to
raise funds.
An almost threefold increase in crude oil prices
in five years makes it attractive for companies
including Reliance Industries Ltd. and Malaysia's
Petroliam Nasional Bhd. to buy and develop energy
assets overseas. Essar is looking to bid in Africa,
Central Asia, Southeast Asia and India, Agrawal
said.
"We want to grow in the exploration and
production business," Prashant Ruia, Essar
group's director, said in a separate interview
in Mumbai yesterday. "We want to grow by
taking acreages in India and overseas. We may
have partners in developing some areas."
Crude oil futures in New York have gained 34
percent in a year and reached a record $83.90
a barrel on Sept. 20, the highest since the contract
was introduced in 1983. Crude for November delivery
was at $79.84 at 10:02 a.m. in London.
'Have a Hedge'
Developing two fields that Essar acquired in
Myanmar in 2005 may cost as much as $1 billion.
Another $500 million is needed for the Ratna fields,
off India's west coast, Agrawal said. At least
$60 million may be spent on surveying an area
in Nigeria, he said.
The overseas fields will help secure crude oil
supplies for Essar Oil Ltd.'s refinery in India's
Gujarat state and natural gas to generate power
for Essar Group's steel plants in India and Canada.
"The group will have a hedge." Agrawal
said. "Even if we don't import it for our
own consumption, we can swap" cargoes with
other producers, he said. "Our energy requirement
is very high and growing."
Essar Oil shares rose as much as 2.55 rupees,
or 4.2 percent, to 62.8 rupees apiece and traded
at 61.2 rupees at 3:41 p.m. local time on the
Bombay Stock Exchange.
Essar Oil, India's newest refiner, started its
plant in Vadinar last November and expects production
to reach the full capacity of 10.5 million metric
tons, or 210,000 barrels a day, this quarter,
Ruia said.
Expansion Plans
The refiner on Aug. 31 sought shareholder approval
to raise $750 million by selling securities overseas
to expand the plant's capacity to 16 million tons
a year. Ruia said the details of the expansion
and funding are still to be worked out.
Essar Global, which owns India's third-biggest
steelmaker, plans to spend about $6 billion to
boost production more than fivefold by 2012.
Output will rise to as much as 25 million tons
a year, said Ruia. Essar Global will increase
annual output at its Canadian unit, Algoma Steel
Inc., to 4 million tons and is also building a
2.5 million-ton-a-year plant in Trinidad and Tobago,
he said.
"It makes sense for the company, whose oil
requirement is growing, to have their own supplies,"
said K.K. Mital, who helps manage 1.5 billion
rupees ($37 million) at Escorts Asset Management
in New Delhi. "It's a backward integration."
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