Gas prices will continue to be maintained at USD 4.2 per million British thermal unit for another 45 days after the September 24 decision of the Cabinet to delay a decision on new gas price guidelines upto November 15.
"In our view, the government needs to quickly fix the pricing policies for oil and gas as part of a broader objective of enhancing India's energy security.
The current energy policies that constrain domestic production and inadvertently encourage energy imports at global prices should be reviewed, it said.
UBS said it believed gas prices will be increased as "the rationale for high cost of developing new gas fields has been well debated, and domestic production needs to be raised to offset imports of higher-priced LNG."
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UBS as well as Bank of America Merrill Lynch expected a gas price of around USD 6.5 per mmbtu to be approved as opposed to USD 8.3-8.4 per mmBtu rate recommended by the Rangarajan Committee.
Kotak said low natural gas prices will prevent any meaningful reinvestment in existing fields and investments in new discovered fields and unexplored regions, which is necessary to sustain and grow domestic production.
"Higher natural gas (and crude oil) prices are essential to sustain the extant production of the upstream companies, given rising operating costs and significant reinvestment in mature fields to simply sustain production," it said.
A comprehensive market-based pricing regime for all forms of energy is ultimately required to remove inefficiencies in the energy chain, rationalise domestic consumption and incentivise indigenous production.