India has recently asked its oil firms to boost ties with resource-rich Africa as the south Asian nation wants to take advantage of tumbling crude prices to lock in supplies to meet future demand.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi last year extended $10 billion in credit to African nations and pitched for a broad alliance for global reform.
“We want Indian oil companies to take advantage of the credit line extended for five years and strike deals…we should take advantage of sliding oil prices and take active role in the development of African nations,” India’s oil minister Dharmendra Pradhan told the India Africa Hydrocarbons Conference, attended by ministers and officials of 22 African nations.
Oil has fallen to 12-year lows this year under pressure from a deepening supply glut and signs of economic weakness in China, the world’s second biggest oil consumer.
According to Vice President of HIS Energy, Ron Kapavik, “India has strategic need for energy security and this is something that Africa can use. India can be a natural market for African hydrocarbon resource”.
India is seen as the most important driver of energy demand growth in the world in the years to come with its oil consumption seen rising by 6 million barrels per day (bpd) to about 10 million bpd by 2040, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).
The world’s third biggest oil importer, has stepped up oil imports from Africa in 2015 and New Delhi wants to boost shipments from the region.
Indian Oil Corp, the country’s largest refiner, has doubled imports from Nigeria at 60,000 barrels per day (bpd) for 2016-17 while Hindustan Petroleum Corp has sought similar volumes from the African nation. African nations want Indian investment to boost their oil output and develop infrastructure.
India Eyes Africa’s Vast Resources to Meet Rising Energy Demands
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