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Mumbai:
Although dismantling of the administered price mechanism in the
oil sector is still a good six months away, oil companies have
already begun taking
steps to counter threat from open market competition.
Reports suggest that
Indian Oil Corporation, which owns only 28 per cent of the retail
outlets operating under the IOC umbrella, has offered to take all
its retail outlets on lease. IOC is willing to pay anything
between Rs 2.50 crore and Rs 3.50 crore to the present owners for
taking retail outlets on a 100-year lease and then giving them
back to the owners to operate them.
Almost 72 per cent of the
existing retail outlets of IOC operate under dealer-owned and
dealer-operated (DODO) system. IOC feels that once the oil sector
is completely liberated from the control of the government, then
their DODO retail outlets could fall prey to incentives, which the
other players would offer and compete with IOC.
IOC has reasons to feel
threatened, considering the fact that it controls almost 70 per
cent of the retail market and almost 55 per cent of its business
comes from these DODO retail outlets.
The other two state-owned oil majors, Bharat Petroleum and
Hindustan Petroleum, own 58 per cent and 47 per cent respectively
of the retail outlets that operate under their umbrella. The Indo
Burma Petroleum Company owns roughly 54 per cent of the retail
outlets.
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