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At 2,000 Kilometres, this will be India's longest LPG pipeline

State-owned Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) plans to lay the country's longest LPG pipeline from Gujarat coast to Gorakhpur in eastern Uttar Pradesh to cater to growing demand for cooking gas in the country. Indian Oil

India TV Business Desk New Delhi Published : Oct 13, 2016 8:18 IST, Updated : Oct 13, 2016 8:18 IST
Indian Oil To Lay Country's Longest LPG Pipeline
Indian Oil To Lay Country's Longest LPG Pipeline

State-owned Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) plans to lay the country's longest LPG pipeline from Gujarat coast to Gorakhpur in eastern Uttar Pradesh to cater to growing demand for cooking gas in the country.

Indian Oil plans to import LPG at Kandla in Gujarat and move it through the 1,987 kilometer pipeline to Gorakhpur via Ahmedabad (in Gujarat), Ujjain, Bhopal (in Madhya Pradesh), Kanpur, Allahabad, Varanasi and Lucknow (in Uttar Pradesh).

The pipeline will carry 3.75 million tons per annum of LPG, Indian Oil said in an application to the Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board - the sectoral regulator - seeking approval for the pipeline project. 

LPG will be fed into the pipeline at Kandla port as well as Indian Oil Corp's Koyali refinery in Gujarat.

This will be the biggest LPG pipeline in the country. GAIL currently operates a 1,415-km line from Jamnagar in Gujarat to Loni near here. The line carries 2.5 million tonnes of LPG annually.

GAIL also has a 623-km Vizag-Secunderabad pipeline. IOC also has a 274-km pipeline from Panipat in Haryana to Jalandhar.

"The demand for LPG is increasing consistently in recent year. Further, due to Government of India's emphasis to make LPG - a clean and environmental friendly fuel, available to every domestic household in the country, LPG demand is expected to increase at much steeper rate in the coming year," IOC said in the application.

IOC expected the deficit between what its refineries produce and the demand to reach about 10 million tons per annum by 2031-32.

LPG demand has grown 10.5 per cent this fiscal with just about half of the 8.4 million tons consumed being locally produced.

"Considering the deficit figures for LPG, it is essential to import LPG at the nearest port and then transport it to the bottling plants through the most economical modes," Indian Oil said.

Indian Oil Corp said it is building additional import capacities at Paradip, Cochin and Kandla to meet the increasing requirements of imports.

"West coast remains most suitable to import LPG to met the demand of North and Central India. Though there is a common carrier pipeline to link West Coast to North ie Jamnagar-Loni pipeline, there is no LPG pipeline in existence or in construction to link West Coast to Central India or Eastern India," it said.

PTI

The proposed pipeline will connect eight of Indian Oil's LPG bottling plants in Central and Northern India.

Sectoral regulator PNGRB has sought expression of interest from companies wishing to take capacity in the pipeline. 25 per cent of the capacity will be reserved for third parties.

Indian Oil Corp caters to nearly half of country's 18 crore LPG consumers.

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