The state government will have 26 per cent stake in the refinery project while HPCL will have the rest shareholding.
The work for the refinery will commence in the current financial year and will complete in next four years, Union Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said.
It will be the largest industrial investment in the state, the minister said further.
Under the new terms and conditions, the refinery cost has come down to Rs 16,845 crore, which was Rs 56,040 crore in the previous MoU done by the Congress government in 2013, Pradhan said.
Elaborating further about the upcoming refinery project, Pradhan said that HPCL, that had to spend Rs 37,230 crore under the previous deal, will now spend Rs 43,129 crore.
"Oil field permission had to end in 2020 but we have provided permission to the refinery to run for 10 more years. Apart from 43,129 crore, additional Rs 27,000 crore investment will be made in the refinery, oil field and petro-chemical complex.
According to the fresh MoU, the refinery will produce BS-VI emission norms compliant fuel. The government plans to move to BS-VI emission norms by 2020.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
