Resolves differences over supply of natural gas from the KG-D6 fields.
Reliance Industries has resolved almost all issues with fertiliser firms, which are first in line to receive natural gas supplies from the Mukesh Ambani-run company’s KG-D6 fields, and is likely to sign gas supply agreements this month.
Reliance has offered liberal take-or-pay terms in the revised Gas Sales and Purchase Agreement that is being sent to nine fertiliser units this week for possible signing, along with the Gas Transportation Agreement, this month.
Sources said fertiliser units would necessarily have to pay for 90 per cent of the volumes allocated to them in a year even though they may not draw even a single cubic metre. But they will have the liberty to take the quantities not drawn, in the next year.
Reliance will extend the five-year supply contract by three months to enable companies to draw the volumes they may not have taken previously. The company will refund money for volumes left even after this three-month period.
The sources said the company, which is likely to begin gas supplies from KG-D6 next month, would not sign supply-or-pay agreement (Reliance will have to pay if it defaults on supplies) as it has no marketing freedom to sell the fuel.
The refund clause in the take-or-pay agreement would be the first of its kind in the world as globally gas suppliers give only a grace period for drawal of fuel not taken previously, the sources said. Fertiliser companies will pay Reliance the rupee equivalent of $4.20 per million British thermal unit (mBtu) price of the natural gas from the Krishna-Godavari basin fields.
In the draft of the gas supply agreement circulated last month, the Fertilizer Association of India had raised the issue of only two fields — Dhirubhai 1 and 3 — in KG-D6 block being earmarked for supplies to the urea making units.
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Reliance has responded to this, saying it cannot commit supplies from the entire block as only two fields have been approved by the government for development. Moreover, the gas supply agreement is only for five years and not a long-term contract.
The company will begin producing 5-10 million standard cubic meters a day (mmscmd) of gas by next month. The output is slated to rise to 40 mmscmd by July. Tata Chemicals, Indo Gulf and IFFCO will be among the first consumers of natural gas from KG-D6.
Eight fertiliser plants on the Hazira-Bijaipur-Jagdishpur pipeline, the Gail India-run pipeline that transports fuel from the Gujarat coast to north India, circuit will get 7.026 mmscmd of Reliance gas, while 6.689 mmscmd will go to Kribhco and GSFC units in Gujarat, Rashtriya Chemical’s Maharashtra plants and Nagarjuna Fertiliser in Andhra Pradesh.
The KG-D6 gas will land at Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh, from where it will be transported to Bharuch in Gujarat through a 1,386-km pipeline laid by Reliance. In Gujarat, Reliance will use the pipeline network of Gujarat State Petronet to take the gas to end-consumers as well as connect to the HBJ pipeline.