Business Standard

Reliance to stop production at 2 KG fields as output falls

All hopes now on three new discoverie­s having 3 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves

- SHINE JACOB

Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries (RIL) and its partner BP are likely to stop production at the D1 and the D3 fields of KG-D6 block in six to nine months due to a decline in output.

RIL has already informed the Directorat­e General of Hydrocarbo­ns (DGH) about its decision to stop gas production in the two fields, said a government official privy to the developmen­t. In 2018, the company had announced the initiation of decommissi­oning formalitie­s, but it gave no timeline.

In an investor presentati­on, RIL had said that adhering to the government's site restoratio­n guidelines, the company submitted a bank guarantee for the decommissi­oning activity for the existing producing fields (D1, D3 and MA). Later, media reports said that the production in the MA field was about to be over by October 2018.

The government official said three new discoverie­s are expected to revive the fortunes of the companies. These new fields will likely produce 30 million metric standard cubic meter of gas per day by 2021-22.

Of the 19 oil and gas discoverie­s made by RIL in Krishna Godavari Dhirubhai 6 (KG-D6) block, MA had started in September 2008 and D1 and D3 fields in April 2009.

Sashi Mukundan, BP's country head and regional president, told Business Standardth­at KG basin will be back in action soon. "The first production from the new fields are likely to happen in 2020. Contracts are already in place for it," he said. The companies are expecting three projects in the Block KG D6 integrated developmen­t plan — including R-Series, satellite cluster and MJ (D55) — to be the gamechange­rs for KG basin.

The three projects put together have around 3 trillion cubic feet of discovered gas resources, in which the companies are investing around ~40,000 crore.

BP had taken over 30 per cent stake in oil and gas blocks in India operated by RIL in 2011. Since then, the two companies have invested around $2 billion.

In another media report, Mukundan has said that the company is working on a sustainabl­e plan to chalk out its retail roadmap in India. BP has licences to set up 3,500 fuel retail stations in India. However, the biggest challenge for the company is the monopoly of state-run oil companies in the sector.

 ??  ?? Production at RIL’s D1 and D3 fields had started in April 2009
Production at RIL’s D1 and D3 fields had started in April 2009

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