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Union Budget 2017-18: A merged oil giant could be disastrous sans operational freedom

State oil firms ran up around 2.5 percent on Finance Minister Arun Jaitley’s Budget proposal to merge them to create an oil behemoth. The move, which is on the lines of forming more autonomous corporations like Shell, British Petroleum and Rosneft, will succeed only if the meddlesome government takes a hands-off approach.

February 02, 2017 / 13:56 IST
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Shishir AsthanaMoneycontrol Research

State oil firms ran up around 2.5 percent on Finance Minister Arun Jaitley’s Budget proposal to merge them to create an oil behemoth. The move, which is on the lines of forming more autonomous corporations like Shell, British Petroleum and Rosneft, will succeed only if the meddlesome government takes a hands-off approach.

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Sound LogicTheoretically, it makes sense to have one single unit perform all the various functions along a supply chain. Prospecting, refining and marketing the oil, if they remain the lookout of one company, cuts costs. With the refining sector having opened up to international players, ring-fencing public sector companies, especially standalone refineries, will be a step in the right direction.

There are 10 public sector companies in the oil and gas space which are broadly divided into oil exploration and production (ONGC and OIL), refining (Chennai Petroleum, Numaligarh Refinery and Mangalore Refinery), refining and marketing (IOC, BPCL and HPCL) and gas import and transportation (GAIL and Petronet).