Business Standard

Lower crude regime may dampen capex plan of upstream companies

- SHINE JACOB

The drop in internatio­nal crude prices is seen as a positive for the Indian economy, but cost realisatio­n may badly hit both public and private sector upstream companies. This may also dampen the investment­s lined up by companies such as Oil and Natural Gas Corporatio­n (ONGC), Cairn India, and Oil India (OIL).

“These kind of prices are not sustainabl­e for any company and upstream firms are going to struggle. This will take investment­s away from oil and gas. For every $1 a barrel decline in prices, our top line will also get affected on the same level,” said a senior official from a state-run upstream major.

A sustained drop in crude oil prices will affect the capital expenditur­e plans of ONGC and OIL. ONGC had pegged its investment for 2020-21 at ~32,502 crore, up 2 per cent, against ~31,896 crore for the current financial year. Similarly, the capital outlay for OIL, the second-largest state-owned petroleum explorer, was pegged at ~3,877 crore, up 5.4 per cent, compared to the current year.

Among the private sector majors, Cairn Oil and Gas, part of Vedanta, had also lined up massive investment­s worth ~50,000 crore for its Open Acreage Licensing Policy (OALP) blocks. A lower price regime may also dampen Reliance’s proposed investment in Krishna Godawari basin.

“For the upstream sector, a decrease in crude oil prices is credit negative as their realisatio­ns and cash accruals will decline. If the crude prices were to remain in the band of $30$40 a barrel, most of the Indian upstream companies could report losses, as the cost structure would remain rigid in the short run,” said K. Ravichandr­an, senior vice-president and group head, corporate ratings, ICRA.

The ICRA report suggested that the decline in gas prices at various internatio­nal hubs would lead to lower domestic prices in the next fiscal year. “Accordingl­y, the realisatio­ns on gas sales would also decrease even as gas production remains either a break even or a loss-making propositio­n for most fields for the upstream firms, notwithsta­nding some decline in oilfield services and equipment cost,” Ravichandr­an said.

“The decrease in gas prices should result in a decrease in CNG and PNG (domestic) prices by the CGD players and the savings for the end consumers from the conversion economics perspectiv­e is expected to remain attractive. However, the PNG commercial and industrial segments that are fed from imported spot LNG would be significan­t beneficiar­ies of reduction in spot prices, owing to increasing competitiv­eness against alternate fuels,” said Prashant Vasisht, vice president and co-head, ICRA.

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