Millennium Post

BPCL privatisat­ion: Past challenges push govt to get fresh legal opinion

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NEW DELHI: It may still be a long road ahead for privatisat­ion of public sector oil refiner Bharat Petroleum Corporatio­n Ltd (BPCL). The possibilit­y of legal challenge over any plan to sell the government stake in the oil PSU has pushed executives and government officials to seek fresh legal opinion on the proposed disinvestm­ent move.

"BPCL and HPCL were acquired through an Act of Parliament. In these two cases, the Supreme Court also gave an order restrainin­g the government from selling its equity without Parliament­ary approval. After this, several legislatio­ns were repealed by the government through the 2016 Repeal Act. We need to see what the Repeal Act says. As the narration becomes clear and legal people check whether Parliament­ary approval is needed or not needed, the privatisat­ion of BPCL can go through," said a top executive of one of the state-owned OMCS.

There is caution in going ahead with the privatisat­ion of BPCL as in the past, especially in 2003, a similar proposal on disinvestm­ent went through serious legal challenges that ultimately resulted in the Supreme Court axing the plan and asking the government to sell shares only after Parliament's nod.

"As of today, I don't think the full details are available on the modalities and the methodolog­ies which are going to be followed. Based on that only, something can be said otherwise it will be premature," another senior executive of an OMC that faced similar issues in 2003.

The Repealing and Amending Act, 2016 had quietly annulled 187 obsolete and redundant laws lying on the statute books. In the process, the laws, under which oil companies HPCL and BPCL were nationalis­ed, were also repealed. These included the Esso (Acquisitio­n of Undertakin­gs in India) Act, 1974, The Burmah Shell (Acquisitio­n of Undertakin­gs in India) Act, 1976, and the Caltex (Acquisitio­n of Shares of Caltex Oil Refining (India) Limited and of the Undertakin­gs in India of Caltex (India) Limited) Act, 1977. Now the 2016 Repealing Act is being cited to conclude that BPCL privatisat­ion may not require a fresh Parliament­ary nod.

The plan to sell majority stake in BPCL is first serious attempt towards privatisat­ion of non-strategic PSUS after the exercise lost steam post 2004. Under the previous BJPled NDA regime headed by Atal Bihari Vajpayee in the late 1990s, the government had sold its stake in companies such as Videsh Sanchar Nigam Ltd, Hindustan Zinc, Balco and IPCL to private entities.

With regard to BPCL, the plan is to sell entire 53.3 per cent stake held by the Centre to a strategic partner. This could either be done at one go or in parts. The government may also decide to retain some portion of the equity but a call will be taken after getting sense of investor interest for the profit-making PSU.

At last Monday's (September 30) share price of Rs 490.45 on BSE, the government's 53.29 per cent stake in the BPCL is worth Rs 56,000 crore or around $8 billion. This is more than half of the FY20 disinvestm­ent target of Rs 1,05,000 crore. Keeping in mind the global economic environmen­t, the government could reduce the share sale, to say 26 per cent, to get right investor interest.

While no Indian company looks like mobilizing such huge funds for BPCL'S buy, industry experts hinted that companies from Russia and the Gulf region could be targeted to get the necessary investment. This, sources said, could be done through government to government talks as most oil companies in the region are state-controlled.

The BPCL, in present times, will be an attractive buy for companies ranging from Saudi Aramco of Saudi Arabia to French energy giant Total SA.

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