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Gold/Mining/Energy : Gasification Technologies -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dennis Roth who wrote (813)10/4/2007 2:08:50 PM
From: Dennis Roth  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1740
 
RIL to make synthetic fuel from petcoke
myiris.com

Reliance Industries is planning to set up a 4,000 tons a day petroleum coke (petcoke) plant, reports Business Line.

Petcoke is a low-value residue produced while refining crude oil and is used for producing fuels such as diesel and naphtha. As Reliance (Q, N,C,F)* produces about 2.5 million tons of this residue per annum this venture looks very profitable, with crude oil prices touching new highs.

The company for this venture may enter into a technological collaboration with Germany-based coal conversion technologies major Lurgi.

Shares of the company closed up Rs 104.20, or 4.55%, at Rs 2,393.55. The total volume of shares traded at the BSE was 2,393,003. (Wednesday)



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (813)10/18/2007 7:00:42 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1740
 
GAIL, RCF join hands for urea plant in Talcher
Jyoti Mukul | Thursday, 18 October , 2007, 08:26
sify.com

GAIL and Rashtriya Chemicals and Fertilizers Limited (RCF) would form a joint venture for an ammonia-based urea plant at Talcher, Orissa.

The Rs 2,400-crore project would utilise synthesis gas from a coal gasification plant.

"The board has decided to set up a joint venture with RCF for an integrated ammonia urea plant based on coal gasification at Talcher," GAIL chairman and managing director UD Choubey said after a meeting of the company's board of directors.

Choubey also announced plans to set up another joint venture with Vadodara Mahanagar Seva Sadan (VMSS) for city gas distribution.

GAIL will have a 25 per cent equity in the joint venture, while VMSS will have 26 per cent equity. The remaining 50 per cent will be held by strategic investors and public.

He also announced a 27.68 per cent rise in net profit at Rs 572.54 crore for the second quarter ended September 30, 2007, compared to Rs 448.40 crore during the corresponding period a year ago.

GAIL director (finance) RK Goel said that the subsidy-sharing burden with oil marketing companies and rupee appreciation had put pressure on the company's performance.

The company has made a provision of Rs 532 crore for the half-year period ending September 30, 2007, on account of subsidy sharing.

GAIL's contribution to the Vadodara joint venture will be by way of management and technical skills, signing gas sale purchase agreement and expanding CNG outlets.

VMSS already supplies gas to domestic and commercial establishments in Vadodara and has an allocation of 1 lakh standard cubic metres a day.

The existing infrastructure of VMSS and GAIL's presence in Gujarat shall be pooled to promote city gas and CNG in particular in Vadodara.

The project schedule for the urea plant and the equity pattern would be decided after RCF completes a feasibility study, which may take at least six months, Choubey said.

GAIL has already applied to Coal India Ltd for allocation of coal for the project. The plant would manufacture 2,940 tonnes of urea per day and would need 5,000 tonnes of coal annually for conversion into feedstock.

RCF and GAIL would enter into a memorandum of understanding, under which GAIL will carry out a techno-economic study of a commercial coal gasification plant, whereas RCF will carry out the techno-economic study of a commercial plant. GAIL and RCF will jointly evaluate the coal gasification potential for the fertiliser industry.

The project will help produce 7.76 million standard cubic metres a day of synthesis gas (equivalent to 3,000 tonnes per day of ammonia).

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GAIL eyeing fertilizer sector; second quarter net profit rises 28%
The Rs2,400 crore plant, to be set up in collaboration with RCF, will have the capacity to produce one million tonnes per annum of urea
livemint.com

Utpal Bhaskar & Udit Misra

New Delhi: GAIL (India) Ltd, the government-run gas pipeline infrastructure company, plans to enter fertilizer manufacturing together with Rashtriya Chemicals and Fertilizers Ltd (RCF) in a Rs2,400 crore joint venture at Talcher in Orissa that will have the capacity to produce one million tonnes per annum (mtpa) of urea.
The company’s board on Wednesday approved the signing of a memorandum of understanding with RCF, which is also state-run.
U.D. Choubey, chairman and managing director of GAIL, said the move into fertilizer was synergestic for his company. “It will be an integrated ammonia urea plant which will use gas obtained from coal gasification. The share of participation is yet to be decided. Though we supply gas to the fertilizer sector, it is for the first time that we will be getting involved in fertilizer production,” he said.
GAIL said net profit for the second quarter ended September rose 27.68% to Rs572.54 crore from Rs448.40 crore in the year-ago period
Gasification involves the conversion of hydrocarbon stock such as coal or petroleum products into gas by applying heat under pressure in the presence of steam. GAIL plans to set up a coal gasification plant at Talcher, as part of the fertilizer project. The project will help produce 7.76 million metric standard cu. m per day (mmscmd) of synthesis gas which will help in producing ammonia.
“We needed an anchor consumer for our gas which we found in this understanding with RCF,” said Choubey, denying the diversification was a result of GAIL’s marketing margins coming under pressure in a pricing regime controlled by the government.
The country’s total fertilizer production capacity stood at 16mt by the end of fiscal 2007, according to government statistics.
RCF will have a minority investment in the fertilizer project. “Our stake in the project would be minimal, around 10-15% only. Talcher has been chosen because all the basic infrastructure is already there,” a senior RCF executive, who did not wish to be identified, said.
An industry representative said the location of the plant augured well for fertilizer consumers. “This move is a part of an ongoing effort to increase domestic capacity,” said R.C. Gupta, deputy director general of the Fertilizers Association of India.
India is expected to import 10mtpa of urea by 2011-12. Also, the Namrupa plant in Assam with a capacity of 270,000 tonnes per annum is the only urea plant in Eastern India currently.
Meanwhile, GAIL said net profit for the second quarter ended September rose 27.68% to Rs572.54 crore from Rs448.40 crore in the year-ago period on the back of better realization in petrochemicals, liquefied petroleum gas and other liquid hydrocarbons. The company’s turnover rose by 22.17% to Rs4,528.90 crore in the quarter.
GAIL also plans to form a city gas distribution joint venture (JV) company with Vadodara Mahanagar Seva Sadan (VMSS), the municipal corporation of Vadodara. While GAIL will hold a 25% stake in the joint venture, VMSS will hold a 26% stake. The remaining equity will be held by strategic investors and the public.
“We are also evaluating opportunities to form JVs with municipal corporations of other cities for city gas distribution,” said B.C. Tripathi, director, marketing, GAIL.
Shares of GAIL fell by 3.79% on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) on Wednesday to close at Rs417.40. The BSE index fell by 1.76%.