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Oil contingency plan ready, says Naik
January 29, 2003 17:08 IST

With war looming in the oil-rich Middle East, governments across Asia are stepping up emergency measures to protect energy-hungry economies from a possible crude price spike which would sap the region's fast growth.

Allaying fears of disruption in crude oil supplies in the event of a US-led war against Iraq, the government on Wednesday said it had put in place a contingency plan to meet any eventuality.

"We are ready to meet any situation. We are keeping our tanks full. The stockpile of crude and products is sufficient to meet country's demand for two months," Petroleum Minister Ram Naik said in New Delhi.

Oil companies have stockpiled over 40 days of petroleum products and 15 days of crude oil supplies.

Sources said Kuwait, a major crude oil supplier to India which is likely to be affected in case of conflict in Iraq, has assured safe delivery by converting Kuwaiti flag vessels to US flag ones.

Besides, enough supplies have been contracted to meet the country's demand in the near future.

Asserting that government had a contingency plan ready to meet any eventuality, Naik said enough supplies have been contracted from countries beyond the conflict zone.

"We import only 1.4 million tonnes of crude oil from Iraq. In the event of a war only these supplies could be affected," sources indicated.

Naik, however, felt that United Nations' say would prevail over that of US in keeping peace in the region.

Sources said a blueprint for building strategic reserves of crude oil is being prepared, which will be implemented in phased manner as it involves huge amount of investment in constructing tankages and maintaining the stockpile.

The country at present has tankages to provide for 45 days cover of petroleum products. Besides, the total crude oil storage capacity with domestic refineries is 19 days (5.7 million tonne).

The government is mulling building storage tankages at Rajkot, Mangalore and Vizag to stock 5 million tonnes of crude oil reserves enough to meet country's 15 days requirement.

Of the proposed tankage, 2.5 million tonnes will be at Rajkot, 1.5 million tonnes at Mangalore and one million tones at Vizag, they added.

"Disruption in supplies is not a very high possibility," Naik said.

 

With benchmark crude prices hovering close to 26-month peaks over $35 a barrel, import-dependent Asia, which has little by way of emergency stocks, is gearing up to safeguard supplies by stockpiling or enforcing measures to limit consumption.

 

South Korea, China, the Philippines and Thailand announced concrete emergency measures this week, while India, Bangladesh have been steadily extending inventories.

 

Unexpected events such as the eight-week opposition strike in Venezuela, which has strangled sales from the world's fifth biggest exporter, and the possibility of war disrupting crude flows from the Middle East have reinforced Asia's vulnerability.

 

"For the last two to three months three factors have been supporting the market: the Venezuelan strike, Iraq and Asian buying," said Sarah Emerson, managing director at Energy Security Analysis (ESAI) in Boston.

 

"Asian governments and refiners tend to build inventory in a crisis, whereas Western countries don't have that kind of speculative buying pre-crisis, they have stocks," she said.

 

About 60 per cent of Asia's daily crude requirement of 21 million barrels is shipped in from other continents, with roughly 10 million barrels a day coming from Middle East producers.

 

Only Japan and South Korea, which import virtually all their energy needs, have built appreciable state emergency reserves exceeding the minimum standard of 90 days of consumption set by the West's energy watchdog, the International Energy Agency.

 

Without that buffer, regional economies would be hard hit by soaring energy bills.

 

Since the 1997 financial crisis, Asia has been trying to boost domestic consumption as a cushion against external economic shocks. An oil price surge may hit consumer spending and corporate investment making Asia more reliant on exports.

 

The 10 ASEAN nations agreed at an unprecedented meeting with China, Japan and South Korea in Osaka, Japan, in September that concerted action was needed to step up energy security through cooperation and coordination of emergency policy.

 

ASEAN comprises Thailand, the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Cambodia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Laos, Singapore and Myanmar.

 

Analysts say the huge cost of building and maintaining inventory gives emerging economies little incentive to stockpile fuel.

 

"China is most likely to build strategic stocks as it still has fast growing demand growth. It is enormously dependent on Middle East crude and it can foot the bill," said ESAI's Emerson.

 

"India may be able to one day, but only if the oil companies bear the brunt of the cost. Frankly, Southeast Asian nations will talk about regional reserves but they just cannot afford it."

 

Following are measures announced in January by Asian governments:

Additional inputs: PTI

Source: REUTERS
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