In response to a global supply tender floated by Petronet LNG Ltd, RasGas of Qatar had quoted a formula that had a fixed component of USD 2.53 per million British thermal unit and a linkage to global oil and coal rates for supply of 7.5 million tonnes a year of LNG for 25 years, industry and company sources said.
The LNG price was to rise or fall by 2 cents per mmBtu in tandem with every dollar movement in oil price. At a USD 100 a barrel oil rate, the LNG price was to be USD 4.13 per mmBtu.
But strangely, an unsolicited offer from RasGas of pricing LNG in a band of USD 16-24 per barrel oil price (USD 2.01 per mmBtu to USD 3.04 per mmBtu gas price) was accepted by Petronet in 2000.
Further, in 2003, Petronet renegotiated the price and agreed to having a fixed price at USD 20 per barrel of oil (USD 2.53 per mmBtu) for five years from 2004-2009 and indexation with actual crude prices thereafter, sources said.
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Had Petronet not changed the contract, the price of LNG from Qatar would have been USD 3.04 per mmBtu for 25 years.
With global LNG rates slumping and the fuel being available at USD 6-7, Petronet is seeking lowering of rates, sources said.
Not just on price, there were changes made in the quality of LNG supplied that put Petronet to a disadvantage.