Khaleej Times

ONGC to buy, not drill, its way to production goal

- Saket Sundria and Debjit Chakrabort­y

mumbai — India’s biggest oil explorer plans to snatch up producing assets to reach its goal of raising overseas output by more than half in about three years, a faster route than drilling for new reserves.

ONGC Videsh Ltd, the overseas investment unit of state-run Oil & Natural Gas Corp, spent $2.2 billion last year on an existing Russian project, which raised production by four million tonnes, or 44 per cent. The company still needs to add more than seven million tonnes to achieve its target of 20 million tonnes by 2020.

“Short-term production goals can only be achieved through producing assets because the exploratio­n life cycle is very long,” managing director Narendra Kumar Verma said last week. “That’s why we are focusing on producing assets to boost production in short term.”

Parent ONGC’s shares rose as much as two per cent to ₹197.25 and traded 1.3 per cent higher at 9.30am on Tuesday in Mumbai. They were the top performer on the benchmark Sensex, which was up 0.1 per cent.

Adding supplies through the purchase

short-term production goals can only be achieved through producing assets because the exploratio­n life cycle is long Narendra Kumar Verma, managing director of ONGC

of producing assets is a faster, and potentiall­y more costly, alternativ­e to exploring and developing new fields.

ONGC Videsh, the nation’s largest overseas oil and gas investor, is struggling to reverse declining output from Russian unit Imperial Energy Corp, which it acquired in 2008, revive assets in Sudan and Syria, raise production in Venezuela and start pumping from Mozambique.

The company bought a 26 per cent stake in Russia’s Vankor project last year from oil giant Rosneft, lifting its overall output to about 12.8 million tonnes in the year ended March 31, from 8.92 million in the previous year. The company expects total output to reach 14 million tonnes by March, with half of that coming from Russia.

“Russia has been giving us good opportunit­ies, and our government­s share good relations,” Verma said. The company is working toward a more diversifie­d portfolio, he said, “but if a good opportunit­y emerges again in Russia, we will not hesitate.”

The oil price crash that started in 2014 helped the company bulk up on assets that have been in production for years. Global benchmark Brent oil, which hit the lowest in more than a decade during January 2016, has recovered to about $65 a barrel. “Definitely the low oil price has offered a window of opportunit­y for us to consolidat­e and increase our footprint,” Verma said.

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