CENTRE MAY GIVE CAIRN OIL FIELD IN LIEU OF $1.4BN
THE MOVE WILL HELP PREVENT SEIZURE OF GOVT’S ASSETS IN CASE OF PAYMENT DEFAULT
NEW DELHI: The government may give Cairn Energy one of the surrendered oil fields such as Ratna RSeries in lieu of the USD 1.4 billion it has pay to the British fir m, helping prevent seizure of foreign assets in case of default as well as get a experienced operator in struggling E&P sector, sources said.
Cairn Energy gave India its biggest onland oil discovery but exited the country after it was slapped with a Rs 10,247-crore tax demand using a legislation that gave the government the powers to tax companies retrospectively. The firm has now won an international arbitration against the tax demand and the government has been ordered to return the value of shares of Cairn it had
sold, dividends it had seized and tax refund it had withheld to recover the tax demand.
For a government struggling to find revenue to boost a COVID-19 battered
economy, options of appeal against the arbitration award are limited and it may not have the financial bandwidth for such a payout, two sources with knowledge of the development said.
"One option is to give Cairn one or more of the oil and gas fields that the government now owns after they are surrendered by operators for various reasons," one of them said.
"The government could give the Ratna and R-Series oil and gas field in the Arabian Sea that taken away from Essar Oil-Premier Oil consortium in 2016 because contractual terms had changed." The Barmer oilfield in Rajasthan, which was originally discovered by Cairn Energy, could be another option. Vedanta Ltd, which now operates the field after it bought out Cairn's Indian subsidiary a decade back, has so far not agreed to the government conditions for getting an extension of contract.