Saudi Aramco this week launched its subsidiary in India with a view to tap opportunities presented by the country’s growing appetite for energy. But what else is Saudi Aramco looking for in India?
Indian oil minister Dharmendra Pradhan and Aramco CEO Amin H. Nasser, who is there to attend the India Energy Forum, jointly inaugurated the company’s office in Gurgaon, a move the minister said would take the buyer-supplier relationship between the two countries to a level of "strategic partnership in oil sector."
- Saudi Aramco Expands Presence In India With Opening Of New Aramco Asia India Office
- Could India Be World’s Next Big Driver Of Oil Consumption?
Aramco’s move to launch a subsidiary in India, Aramco Asia India (AAI), coincides with its ongoing talks for acquiring a stake in the crore coastal refinery being planned in Maharashtra by an Indian oil-led consortium of state-run refiner-marketers.
India is particularly important for Aramco as the firm is trawling for refinery stake in major oil-consuming economies to lock in customers ahead of its IPO next year.
Both International Energy Agency and BP Statistical Review of World Energy have projected India’s oil consumption growth to be the fastest among all major economies over the next two decades. India has already surpassed Japan as the world’s third largest oil consumer and is expected to overtake China.
But Aramco, traditionally India’s top oil supplier, has not found the going smooth in such a growing market in the face of challenge from fellow Opec member Iraq.