India, China aim to team up for oil assets (Reuters) Updated: 2005-08-17 07:19
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Indian and Chinese oil firms will sign agreements aimed
at bidding jointly for foreign oil and gas projects and reducing cut-throat
competition, a top Indian official told Reuters on Tuesday.
Indian firms will sign separate memoradums of understanding (MOUs) with
Sinopec Corp, China National Petroleum Corp. and CNOOC, the head of Indian oil
ministry's international division said.
"They have given a very specific and strong commitment for cooperation,"
Talmiz Ahmad told Reuters after a visit to China.
Indian firms likely to sign the MOUs include Oil and Natural Gas Corp, its
overseas subsidiary ONGC Videsh, Oil India Ltd., Indian Oil Corp., Bharat
Petroleum Corp Ltd and Hindustan Petroleum Corp Ltd, he said.
"A senior executive in a Chinese company said joint bids from India and China
would be so formidable that there are no targets which will not be accessable,"
Ahmad said.
The agreements would be signed when India's oil
minister, Mani Shankar Aiyar, visits China later this year, he said.
"An inter-governmental joint working group will be set up to monitor the
cooperation and give it the necessary momentum."
Aiyar said in February that the two countries may jointly bid for some
foreign projects and compete in others.
In April, a joint statement issued during Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao's visit
to India said the two countries agreed to cooperate in their quest for energy
security.
Asian oil firms have spent billions of dollars on projects around the world,
including in countries such as Sudan that are off-limits to oil majors, and
picked up scraps hived off by cost-cutting Western oil companies.
Chinese oil giants have been scouring the globe for energy assets in the last
five years, spending over $5 billion in projects from Australia to Indonesia and
Sudan to Saudi Arabia.
Similarly, India, which imports 70 percent of its crude oil requirement, has
stakes in projects in several countries including Myanmar, Sudan, Russia, Libya
and Australia.
India's hunt for oil projects is led by state-run exploration firm ONGC, but
the country's largest refiner, Indian Oil Corp. has also joined the race and won
an exploration block in Libya.
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