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Business News/ Companies / IOC not hit by Iran crude payments row: Chairman
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IOC not hit by Iran crude payments row: Chairman

IOC not hit by Iran crude payments row: Chairman

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Singapore: Indian Oil Corp (IOC) has so far been unaffected by an oil payments row with Iran but could turn to the spot market if there is any disruption to imports, the company’s chairman B.M. Bansal said on Thursday.

A sale of shares in the state-run company planned by the government could start in June or July, B.M. Bansal also said during a trip to Singapore as part of a delegation led by the oil minister Murli Deora.

“IOC is not buying much of its crude share from Iran. So far we are not affected," Bansal said. IOC buys about 1 million tonnes from Iran, out of the roughly 40 million tonnes it imports each year, he added.

India expects a dispute with Iran over payment for crude oil to be settled as early as next week, ending a deadlock that has threatened to stall supplies from the Middle Eastern nation, oil secretary S. Sundareshan said on Wednesday.

The two countries are working to sort out the dispute that could block imports of 400,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude as New Delhi is walks a fine line between balancing its energy needs and global diplomatic interests.

The two nations have so far not been able to find a solution on how New Delhi should pay for oil imports from Iran after India’s central bank said last month that payments to the Middle East country could no longer be settled using a long-standing clearing house system run by regional central banks.

Bansal also said that his company is losing Rs130 crore ($28.9 million) a day from selling fuels such as diesel, liquefied petroleum gas and kerosene below costs as the government regulates prices to keep inflation in check.

Indian Oil is losing Rs7 per every of litre of diesel sold.

The losses, referred to as under recoveries, would total $14 billion in the year ending March, S. Sundareshan said on Wednesday.

These losses are shared by the state-run oil companies and the government. Fuel subsidies cost the government about $3.8 billion a year and are seen as a drain on the treasury.

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Published: 13 Jan 2011, 11:10 AM IST
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