Business Standard

GAIL, non-telcos in talks for AGR legal recourse

GAIL lines up ~1 trn capex for next five years

- SHINE JACOB

GAIL India is in talks with non-telecom public sector undertakin­gs to take a common legal recourse in the adjusted gross revenue (AGR) issue. It is in discussion with Oil India and Power Grid Corporatio­n, among others. Earlier this month, the Supreme Court had directed the transmissi­on major to approach the appropriat­e forum.

GAIL India is in talks with non-telecom public sector undertakin­gs (PSUS) to take a common legal recourse in the controvers­ial adjusted gross revenue (AGR) issue. Among the companies it is in discussion­s with are Oil India (OIL) and Power Grid Corporatio­n (PGCIL).

Earlier this month, the Supreme Court had directed the transmissi­on major to approach the appropriat­e forum regarding the issue.

The department of telecommun­ications (DOT) had raised a demand of ~1.83 trillion from the company towards annual licensing fee, including interest and penalty of AGR. If the amount has to be paid, it will significan­tly affect the ~1 trillion capital expenditur­e plan the company has lined up for the next five years.

“We are hoping that we will not have to pay the money,” said Manoj Jain, chairman and managing director of GAIL.

The firms are yet to decide on the legal options, including approachin­g the Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (TDSAT).

Around 50 per cent of the capacity expansion that the firm has lined up will be on the transmissi­on business. For this, the government is already working on a proposal to come up with a separate subsidiary.

“We have lined up investment­s to the tune of around ~1 trillion for the next five years. Of this, around ~50,000 crore will be for the transmissi­on business, ~10,000 crore will go towards petrochemi­cals and ~40,000 crore for its joint venture infrastruc­ture expansion,” he said.

This includes an addition of 7,000 km of pipeline network to its existing capacity. GAIL is looking to double its revenue and increase profits by 1.5 times by 2025.

The investment plans are part of the overall $5 trillion lined up by the government and the strategy is to increase the share of gas to 15 per cent in the overall energy basket.

The company expects the transmissi­on business to have a larger share in the next five years as the demand for natural gas is expected to increase by 6-8 per cent per year by then.

Jain said that the government is working on a proposal to have a 100 per cent subsidiary for transmissi­on and the new entity will be in place within a year “once the Cabinet nod is in place.”

GAIL, which owns and operates 5 mt LNG import facility in Dhabol, has already awarded contracts for constructi­on of breakwater in Dhabol to Larsen & Toubro (L&T). “The terminal will start working to its full capacity in the next two-and-a-half years,” he said.

The country has already lined up an additional LNG capacity of 18 mt from the current 39 mt in the next few years.

“WE ARE HOPING THAT WE WILL NOT HAVE TO PAY THE MONEY” MANOJ JAIN,

Chairman and managing director, GAIL

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