Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Govt may open ONGC top post to military officers

The post has been vacant since April 2021 and experts have urged the govt not to drag its feet over appointing a chief for this strategica­lly important company

- Rajeev Jayaswal letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The government is considerin­g formally opening chief executive positions in its blue-chip companies to senior armed force officers, starting with state-run energy behemoth Oil and Natural Gas Corporatio­n (ONGC), even as public sector firms are planning to give preferenti­al employment opportunit­ies to “Agniveers” in junior positions on completing their fouryear tour of duty, two people aware of the developmen­t said.

The government has initiated the process to appoint a chairman & managing director (CMD) at ONGC through a search cum selection committee (SCSC) formed in February this year. The panel has been specifical­ly directed to “consider central government officers, including those of the armed forces of the Union and the all-India Services” for the post, the officials cited above said quoting from an official document.

“Meanwhile, the petroleum ministry has also made some changes in eligibilit­y conditions for the position of CMD, ONGC, and has sought a formal approval from the competent authority,” one of the people said, asking not to be named.

SCSC is headed by the chairperso­n of Public Enterprise­s Selection Board (PSEB) Mallika Srinivasan, with the petroleum secretary, Pankaj Jain, as a member. The position that fell vacant on April 1, 2021, could not be filled as PSEB, after conducting interview of several candidates could not find them suitable for the post. Hence, the government decided to form the SCSC.

The top post in ONGC has been vacant since April 1, 2021 and it isn’t clear why the government has dragged its feet over appointing a chief for this strategica­lly important company. The petroleum ministry, the department of personnel and training (DoPT), and PSEB did not respond to an e-mail seeking comments. Two former senior executives at ONGC, who asked not to be named, said this is the first time the government has explicitly mentioned officers from the armed forces as eligible candidates for the CMD position.

“Although in the past, the Indira Gandhi government recruited Colonel Satya Pal Wahi as ONGC chairman in 1981, he had come to the organisati­on after spending over a decade in several corporate enterprise­s, such as the Bokaro Steel Plant, Bharat Heavy Electronic­s Ltd (BHEL), and Cement Corporatio­n of India (CCI) as chairman,” one of the executives said.

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