Khaleej Times

Indian realtor becomes wildcatter in emerging giant’s oil hunt

- Debjit Chakrabort­y and Saket Sundria

new delhi — A drugmaker, a real estate developer and an edible oil company are among firms answering India’s call to tap undevelope­d oil fields and become the newest explorers in the world’s fastestgro­wing energy consumer.

As many as 42 companies bid in the country’s auction round that closed November 21. They are vying for 34 of 46 discovered oil and gas fields with estimated reserves of more than India’s total

our intention was to create about five new oil and gas companies Atanu Chakrabort­y, head of Directorat­e General of Hydrocarbo­ns

annual output, according to a government statement.

“A lot of the bidders are first time players in oil and gas,” Atanu Chakrabort­y, the head of oil regulator, Directorat­e General of Hydrocarbo­ns, said in a phone interview on Tuesday. “Our intention was to create about five new oil and gas companies through this auction and I’m sure we can do that.”

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is striving to woo investors to help boost oil and gas production from local fields as he targets to reduce overseas energy purchases by 2022. India’s $2-trillion economy imports more than 80 per cent of its crude requiremen­t and a heavy reliance on imports risks its status as the fastest-expanding major economy in the world. The Internatio­nal Energy Agency expects the country to be the fastest-growing crude consumer in the world through 2040. Of 37 non-state companies that have bid, 32 are domestic and five are internatio­nal, Chakrabort­y said. These include Sun Petrochemi­cals Pvt, a privately owned company formed by the directors of drugmaker Sun Pharmaceut­icals Industries Ltd, Megha Engineerin­g & Infrastruc­ture Ltd, Enquest Drilling Pvt and real estate firm Cheval Developers Pvt.

Cheval Developers Pvt, a real estate firm based in Ahmedabad, is vying for five discovered fields.

“The real-estate sector is in a bad shape and I was looking for other opportunit­ies,” director Nishit Desai said by phone. “Oil has changed the fortunes of many. I’m betting on that.”

Nippon Power Ltd bid for eight fields, including three in the northeaste­rn state of Assam, according to a government statement.

Explorers Bharat Petro Resources Ltd, Cairn India Ltd and Hindustan Oil Exploratio­n Co will compete with the company in some of the areas even as larger establishe­d companies like Reliance Industries Ltd and Oil & Natural Gas Corp have stayed away. The foreign bidders include the local unit of Hardy Oil & Gas Plc. All the companies mentioned in this story confirmed bidding for the auction.

P. Elango, managing director of Hindustan Oil Exploratio­n Co, said the government’s decision to lower the entry barrier by removing technical qualificat­ions helped small domestic companies.

“In the current oil price environmen­t, no overseas company will go to a new country and invest,” he said. “The only strategy is to involve local players.”

State-run ONGC dominates exploratio­n and production in India. — Bloomberg

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