The Asian Age

Gujarat firm may start KG basin output soon

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New Delhi, May 18: The first major project to be commission­ed after Narendra Modi takes over as Prime Minister may be one by his pet Gujarat firm GSPC, which is ready to produce gas from a field in the Krishna Godavari basin.

Gujarat State Petroleum Corp ( GSPC) has completed the $ 2- billion developmen­t of the Deen Dayal shallowwat­er gas field and is conducting pre- commission­ing and testing activities.

Gas production is likely to start in June, sources privy to the developmen­t said.

The Gujarat government­owned GSPC, which faced several technical difficulti­es in developing the field in the Bay of Bengal, is keeping the commission­ing date under wraps.

However, sources said most facilities — both offshore as well as the onshore receipt and processing plant — are ready and first gas is expected in June, by when the gas pricing issue would have been sorted out.

In 2013, GSPC sought to sell gas at the rate at which India imports long- term LNG ( liquefied natural gas) from Qatar. At $ 100 per barrel of oil, the LNG import price comes to about $ 13 per million British thermal units.

The UPA government did not approve this rate and instead went by a formula suggested by a panel headed by Dr C. Rangarajan, under which the price of gas in this quarter should be about $ 8.3 per mBtu. The price wasn’t notified due to the elections and the new government under Mr Modi is expected to decide on the matter.

In June 2005, Mr Modi announced that GSPC had discovered gas in well KG# 8, six kilometres away from the Yanam- Kakinada coast of Andhra Pradesh.

At that time, he said it was the biggest discovery, with 20 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves, 50 per cent more than the known reserves of Reliance Industries’ KG- D6 block.

Mr Modi named the block in which the discovery was made as Deen Dayal. Deen Dayal West, the name given to the KG# 8 find, was certified to hold 1.8 tcf of reserves by the government’s Directorat­e General of Hydrocarbo­ns ( DGH).

Sources said GSPC had planned to start production from Deen Dayal West by 2013 but the project was delayed by a year.

Initial output from Deen Dayal West is likely to be between 60 million and 70 million cubic feet of gas per day from eight or nine producing wells, which will then climb to 200 mmcfd ( 5.6 million cubic meters per day), they said.

Subsequent to the Deen Dayal West discovery, six additional finds were made in the block, taking the area’s total reserves beyond the DGH estimate. All the finds put together have the potential to produce more than 500 mmcfd ( 14.15 mmscmd), once various developmen­ts are completed.

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