Indian state-owned refinery IOC plans to expand its base oil production capacity to 1.73 mn t/yr by December 2027, the company said on 30 January at an event in Singapore.
IOCL will add 1.28mn t/yr of Group II and Group III base oil production at three of its refineries in India by 2027. This is a 180pc increase to its current base oil capacity. The company currently produces 450,000 t/yr of Group I and Group II base oil at its refinery in Haldia, West Bengal. The increased capacity is expected to support a projected increase of 50pc in India's finished lubricant demand to 4.5mn t/yr by 2030, according to IOC.
IOC plans to add a new 235,000 t/yr Group II and Group III base oil plant in Vadodara, Gujarat by the end of this year. The producer will build a new 538,000 t/yr Group II and Group III base oil unit in the district of Panipat, northwest of India. This is expected to be completed in either 2024 or 2025.
The state-owned producer will add an additional 250,000 t/yr Group II base oil production at its Chennai refinery. It will also add 255,000 t/yr of Group III production to its existing facility at Haldia by 2027.
After its expansions are complete, the producer will have a total capacity of 291,000 t/yr of Group I, 931,000 t/yr of Group II, 469,000 t/yr of Group III and 87,000 t/yr of white oils and other extracts. The state-controlled producer also said it will promptly apply for OEM certifications for the Group III+ base oil produced at its Haldia facility. IOC's additional base oil capacity will support India's increasing self-reliance on domestic supply.
"Even with the increase in our domestic base oils production, we are confident that with the country's fast pace of growth in the white oils, transformer oils and tire oils demand sector, we will continue to import and work closely with other overseas base oils suppliers," IOC's executive director of lubricants Subimal Mondal said. "We will also continue to export our base oil supplies whenever we can."
India's base oil imports edged down in November 2022 as competitively-priced and plentiful domestic supplies hampered demand for overseas supplies.
Steeply discounted Russian crude oil has added support to more competitive domestic base oil prices. India has been procuring more Russian crude oil since the Russia-Ukraine conflict began in February 2022.

