Business Standard

Bangladesh denies India bilateral deal

- SHINE JACOB

Petronet LNG's plan to build a liquefied natural gas (LNG) facility at Maheshkhal­i island in Cox’s Bazar district of Bangladesh through a government-to-government deal has been put on the back burner.

Bangladesh has instead asked India to bid in the ongoing round for an LNG regasifica­tion terminal at Matarbari, also Cox’s Bazar. An expression of interest (EoI) was floated in January.

This comes after Petronet LNG managing director Prabhat Singh last month said the company would not bid for the Matarbari project and instead wanted a bilateral deal on the Maheshkhal­i terminal.

Bir Bikram Tawfiq-e-Elahi Chowdhury, advisor (minister) to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina for power, energy and mineral resources, told Business Standard that though Petronet had submitted a feasibilit­y report to set up a terminal at Maheshkhal­i, the country cannot afford it and has no appetite for so many terminals at one go. “We cannot have so many landbased terminals. We have made this clear to Indian Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan. We have sought the participat­ion of Petronet in the land LNG terminal (at Matarbari) during our meeting,” said Chowdhury, who met Pradhan on the sidelines of the Petrotech 2019 in Greater Nodia on Monday.

Rupantarit­a Prakritik Gas Co, part of state-owned Petrobangl­a, late in January had invited an EoI for the design, engineerin­g, procuremen­t, constructi­on and commission­ing of a land-based terminal at Matarbari that can handle 7.5 MT of LNG.

Chowdhury also had some tough words for ONGC Videsh (OVL), a fully-owned subsidiary of state-run Oil and Natural Gas Corporatio­n (ONGC), for the delay in the start of exploratio­n work in its blocks. "They are late by around three years. We have given now them an extension of two years.”

OVL along with Oil India had got two shallow water exploratio­n blocks SS-09 and SS-04 off Bangladesh in the Bay of Bengal during the 2012 hydrocarbo­n bidding rounds in that country. Bangladesh expects the first well to be spun by OVL by the month-end.

Chowdhury also expected the first phase of the joint coal-based power project with NTPC would be commission­ed by 2020. NTPC and Bangladesh Power Developmen­t Board (BPDP) are jointly working on the project. "The reason for the delay of the project is not just environmen­tal issues. There were other technical issues related to project implementa­tion," he said. The 1320MW coal-fired power plant at Rampal in Bangladesh had faced the rough weather owing to its proximity of 14 km to the world’s largest mangrove forests, the Sundarbans.

“We cannot have so many land-based terminals. We have made this clear to Indian Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan. We have sought the participat­ion of Petronet in the land LNG terminal (at Matarbari) during our meeting”

BIR BIKRAM TAWFIQ-E-ELAHI CHOWDHURY Advisor (minister) to Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina for power, energy and mineral resources

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