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India News News

How does Rajasthan’s Pachpadra mega refinery compare to the Pyramid of Giza, Burj Khalifa, Eiffel Tower?

  • BY India News Newsdesk
  • July 3, 2026
  • 0 COMMENTS

Jaipur, July 3 (IANS) The Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited (HPCL) Rajasthan Refinery at Pachpadra is not just India’s first greenfield integrated refinery-cum-petrochemical complex, it is also one of the country’s most ambitious engineering projects, built on a scale that can best be understood through comparisons with some of the world’s most iconic landmarks.

Spread across the desert landscape of Rajasthan’s Balotra district, the Rs 79,459-crore refinery, which Prime Minister Narendra Modi will dedicate to the nation on Saturday, required engineering and construction efforts rarely seen in India’s industrial history. The numbers tell the story.

To prepare the site, engineers excavated nearly 15 million cubic metres of earth, about six times the volume of the Great Pyramid of Giza, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.

The project consumed 1.6 million cubic metres of concrete, nearly five times the quantity used in constructing the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building.

Nearly 300,000 metric tonnes of steel went into building the refinery, around 40 times the amount used for the Eiffel Tower in Paris.

The scale extends beyond conventional construction material. The refinery has nearly 28,000 km of electrical cabling, a distance more than twice the Earth’s diameter, connecting thousands of instruments, control systems and processing units across the vast complex.

Among its most striking structures is the 125-metre-high coke drum, towering nearly three times the height of Gol Gumbaz in Karnataka and standing among the tallest industrial structures of its kind in the country.

Officials describe the project as one of the most challenging industrial constructions undertaken in western India, with engineers having to overcome harsh desert conditions, shifting sand, extreme temperatures and complex logistics while building a state-of-the-art refinery.

The integrated refinery-cum-petrochemical complex has a refining capacity of 9 million metric tonnes per annum (MMTPA) and a petrochemical capacity of 2.4 MMTPA. It also boasts a Nelson Complexity Index (NCI) of 17, placing it among the most sophisticated refineries in India.

The high complexity enables it to process a wide range of domestic and imported crude into premium petroleum products and petrochemicals with greater efficiency and higher value addition.

Developed as a joint venture between HPCL and the Rajasthan government, the refinery is expected to transform the state’s industrial landscape by anchoring a petrochemical and plastic manufacturing ecosystem.

Beyond its engineering achievements, the project has also generated substantial employment.

Around 35,000 workers were engaged during construction, while nearly one lakh indirect jobs were created in allied sectors.

With commercial production already underway, the refinery is expected to strengthen India’s energy security, reduce dependence on imported petrochemicals and position Rajasthan as an emerging petrochemical hub.

–IANS

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