Business Standard

Govt weighs legal view on higher RIL gas price

- SHINE JACOB

The petroleum ministry will seek legal opinion on whether it can allow a higher price to Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL), and its partners BP and Niko Resources, for natural gas from the KG-D6 block.

This comes against the backdrop of the company withdrawin­g from one of its arbitratio­n cases with the government.

The case relates to gas price for the D1 and D3 discoverie­s in the KG-D6 block. While the price for domestic natural gas for the April 1-September 30 period has been kept at $2.50 per million British thermal unit (mBtu), for deepwater blocks a higher price with a cap of $5.56 per mBtu is allowed.

RIL and its partners were denied this price because of the arbitratio­n proceeding­s.

“The government is evaluating the issue in the backdrop of the contractor­s withdrawin­g from the arbitratio­n. However, other arbitratio­n cases continue. We are set to take legal opinion on whether they can be allowed a higher gas price,” a source said.

Ambani and BP Chief Executive officer Bob Dudley had announced ~40,000 crore worth fresh investment­s in the KG-D6 block last month after meeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan.

RIL and its partners may have withdrawn from the arbitratio­n because of a new government policy on marketing and pricing freedom for discoverie­s that are yet to commence commercial production. The guidelines deny contractor­s this freedom if there is an existing arbitratio­n case related to pricing of that field.

There are other arbitratio­n cases related to the KGD6 block between the government and RIL.

The company has initiated arbitratio­n on a $1.55billion penalty for producing Oil and Natural Gas Corporatio­n’s share of gas in the KG basin. According to a D&M report, over 11.2 billion

cubic metres of gas had migrated from ONGC’s idling KG fields.

RIL claimed it had worked within its block and had complied with all provisions of the production sharing contract. It issued a notice for arbitratio­n to the government in November 2016.

In 2011, RIL had initiated arbitratio­n anticipati­ng the government would penalise it for not meeting output targets. Till March 31, 2015, the total cost recovery disallowed comes to $2.8 billion. However, production from the fields continued to decline over the years.

During the fourth quarter of 2016-17, the KG-D6 field produced 0.28 million barrels of crude oil and 23.4 billion cubic feet of natural gas, declining 15 per cent and 25 per cent, respective­ly, from the same quarter a year ago. According to RIL, this was on account of a natural decline coupled with water and sand ingress.

The company has initiated arbitratio­n on a $1.55-billion penalty for producing Oil and Natural Gas Corporatio­n’s share of gas in the KG basin

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