GAIL India to borrow 50-60 billion rupees in financial year 2027

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NEW DELHI, April 9 (Reuters) – India’s largest gas distributor GAIL (India) (GAIL.NS), opens new tab plans to borrow 50-60 billion rupees ​in fiscal 2027 to fund expansion, and has bought three ‌spot LNG cargoes to offset supply shortages caused by the Iran war, a company executive said on Thursday.
The amount it plans to borrow would be the ​equivalent of $539 million-$647 million.

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Finance director Rakesh Jain, at an industry ​event, also said GAIL’s Dabhol LNG import terminal in ⁠Ratnagiri, Maharashtra state, is handling 2.25 million tonnes per year, below ​its 5 million tpy capacity, due to tighter global supplies.

Iran’s blocking ​of the Strait of Hormuz, which handles 20% of global LNG flows, and damage to Qatar’s liquefaction trains – sidelining 12.8 million tons per year of supply ​for three to five years – have slashed availability and pushed up ​spot prices.
Last year, India received nearly half of its LNG imports from Qatar, according ‌to ⁠data from analytics firm Kpler.
Indian refiner Hindustan Petroleum Corp (HPCL.NS), opens new tab has also been unable to secure an LNG cargo to operate its 5 million tpy Chhara LNG terminal on the west coast in Gujarat ​state, a company ​source told ⁠reporters at the event.
The source said HPCL did not receive cargoes from its supplier, ADNOC Trading, in ​March and April, as ADNOC Trading was due to ​deliver ⁠volumes sourced from Qatar, and that the Chhara terminal had yet to reach full operational capacity due to operational issues.

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