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Oil Min for no domestic gas supply to merchant power plants

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Jan 21 2013 | 12:40 AM IST

The Oil Ministry is mulling a ban on the supply of scarce domestically produced natural gas to merchant power plants, a senior government official said today.

As per the proposal, domestic natural gas, which is available at one-third the price of imported LNG, will only be supplied to companies that sell all power produced from this gas at regulated tariffs, a ministry official said.

Merchant power plants are units that do not enter into any long-term power purchase contract for the sale of power and instead sell their output in the spot market. Tariffs in the spot market depend on the supply and demand situation and have on many occasions been several times that of regulated tariffs.

The official said a scarce natural resource cannot be used for profiteering.

"It is felt that domestically available scarce gas (which is substantially cheaper than the imported LNG) should be made available only to those power plants that are willing to sell power to the grid so that power is available to people at large at regulated rates," he said.

Against the demand of 230 million cubic metres per day, India produces about 166 mmscmd, including close to 45 mmscmd from Reliance Industries' eastern offshore KG-D6 fields.

KG-D6 gas and other domestically produced gas is priced at $4.20 per million British thermal units, while imported gas in its liquid form (called liquefied natural gas, or LNG) costs upward of $13-14 per mmBtu.

Of the 21.87 mmscmd of KG-D6 gas that has been allocated to 27 power plants in the country, at least two of them (the Lanco Kondapalli expansion and Tanir Bavi in Andhra Pradesh) are merchant power plants that sell power during peak seasons to private entities at an average price premium of about Rs 2 per unit compared to the regulated rates.

The official said a view on the 1.46 mmscmd allocated to Lanco and 0.88 mmscmd supplied to Tanir Bavi will have to be taken by the Empowered Group of Ministers (EGoM).

"In view of the scarcity of domestic gas, the current and future allocations of domestic gas will be subject to the condition that the entire electricity produced from this gas shall be sold under long-term Power Purchase Agreements to the grid/distribution companies at regulated tariffs approved by the regulator(s)," the policy under formulation reads.

 

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First Published: Oct 11 2011 | 4:29 PM IST

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