Millennium Post

Bharat Petroleum's Mozambique deal under scanner; yet to get investment nod: Sources

-

NEW DELHI: The government is looking into stateowned Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd's (BPCL) investment­s in a gas block in Mozambique and has not yet formally given its approval to the firm for further spendings, sources said.

Bharat Petroresou­rces Ltd (BPRL), an exploratio­n and production subsidiary of BPCL, had in August 2008 bought a 10 per cent stake in Area-1 Offshore of the Rovuma Block from the US energy major Anadarko Petroleum Corp for $75 million. That same month Videocon through its subsidiary acquired a 10 per cent stake in the same block for an equivalent block.

Sources privy to the developmen­t said Anadarko had originally offered a 20 per cent stake in Area-1 to BPCL but the stateowned firm bought only half of it and the rest was picked up by Videocon.

Videocon in 2013 sold the same stake to ONGC Videsh Ltd for $2.475 billion.

Sources said the government is looking into reasons why BPCL did not buy the entire 20 per cent stake offered to it by Anadarko. Also, why it did not get other state-owned firms like ONGC involved if it wanted the exploratio­n risk to be shared by splitting the 20 per cent stake.

These inquests have led to the government not formally according approval to BPCL to invest a further $2.2-2.4 billion in the developmen­t of a giant gas field discovered in Area-1.

The proposal was reviewed by an informal ministeria­l panel headed by Home Minister Amit

Shah in June this year.

The Bjp-led NDA government since first coming to power in 2014 has been critical of the nearly $6 billion spent by the Indian public sector firms to take 30 per cent stake in the Rovuma Offshore Area-1 in Mozambique during the Congress-led UPA regime, as falling oil and gas prices did not justify such huge investment­s.

Besides buying Videocon's 10 per cent stake for $2.475 billion, ONGC Videsh Ltd, the overseas arm of state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC), had bought another 10 per cent stake from project operator Anadarko of US for $2.64 billion.

It later gave 4 per cent out of the stake bought from Videocon to Oil India Ltd.

Sources said even the OVL deal had in the first term of Modi government come under the scanner following allegation­s that the company might have overpaid Videocon.

Videocon was in 2012 willing to sell its stake to OVL at a small premium to the price Thailand's PTT Exploratio­n and Production paid for acquiring an 8.5 per cent stake in the same block from Cove Energy for 1.22 billion ($1.9 billion at the exchange rate prevalent at that time). The 10 per cent stake, they said, was available to OVL for about $2.3 billion or so but the company a year later paid $2.475 billion to Videocon.

OVL had strongly refuted the allegation­s then and it isn't known what happened to that scrutiny.

Woodlands, Texas-based energy exploratio­n company Anadarko, which was later acquired by Occidental, is the operator of the block. Other partners in Area 1 include Mitsui with 20 per cent stake, ENH (15 per cent) and PTTEP (8.5 per cent). Gas from the block is to be converted into liquefied natural gas (LNG) for transporta­tion by ships to markets like India.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India