The deal, which includes taking over of USD 4.5 billion debt on Essar Oil books, is likely to be signed on Saturday in Goa, sources privy to the transaction said.
Rosneft PJSC is likely to take 49 per cent stake while Trafigura Group Pte and UCP will split another 49 per cent equally among them.
The Ruia family, which currently owns Essar Oil, will keep a token 2 per cent stake after the deal is signed during Russian President Vladimir Putin's visit to Goa for the BRICS Summit on October 15-16, sources said.
A larger 74 per cent stake was offered to Rosneft but that idea was dropped as the Russian company faces US sanctions and by a virtue of its majority stake Essar Oil too would have come on that list.
At this stage, Trafigura was roped in and offered 24 per cent stake. Trafigura, which has close ties to Rosneft, was to finance its acquisition by taking loan from Russia's VTB Capital, part of state-controlled bank VTB.
The deal includes the Vadinar refinery as well as the Vadinar port and more than 2,500 petrol pumps. A power plant serving the refinery as well as company's coal-bed methane (CBM) blocks are unlikely to be included in the deal.
As part of the deal, Rosneft-Trafigura will also takeover the debt of Essar Oil, sources said.
Last year US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) had issued a Crimea Sanctions Advisory, adding Rosneft and its subsidiaries to its Sectoral Sanctions Identifications List in retaliation for the Russian "invasion" of eastern Ukraine.
OAO Rosneft had in March signed a non-binding agreement to buy a 49 per cent stake in Essar Oil. This was a follow-up of the July 2015 deal wherein Rosneft was to supply Vadinar refinery with 200,000 barrels of crude per day (10 million tons a year) for 10 years.
Sources said Trafigura may at a later stage transfer its stake to Rosneft.
Trafigura handles most of the crude exported by Rosneft. This has propelled Trafigura to being the world's second- biggest independent oil trader, handling more than 4 million barrels a day.
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