India buys 7.5 million tonnes of LNG a year on a long-term 25 year contract, indexed to a moving average of crude oil price. The price of LNG from Qatar comes close to USD 13 per million British thermal unit as compared to the USD 6-7 rate at which it is available in the spot or current market.
Petronet LNG Ltd "is working to mitigate the impact of the higher prices under the long-term contracts so as to bring the LNG prices more in line with the current market conditions", Oil Secretary Kapil Dev Tripathi said here.
"While this is good for the consumers, this has also created a disparity in the prices of LNG under the long-term contracts vs the spot prices," he said while addressing Petronet's 17th annual general meeting (AGM) here.
The high price of LNG under the long-term contract has led to users in fertiliser and power industry finding it cheaper to use alternate fuels like naphtha and fuel oil.
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Petronet LNG Ltd, which has been buying LNG from Qatar on a long-term contract since 2004, has reduced the annual offtake by at least 30 per cent this year because of the high price.
"Although various factors have contributed to this volatility, the emergence of the USA as a large producer of shale oil and shale gas has been the primary reason for the abundance of oil and gas, resulting in reduced imports into the USA," he said.
This, coupled with the start in production of various LNG projects, has increased the availability of LNG around the world, he said.
India, he said, is the fourth largest importer of LNG in the world. "A total of about 14 million tons per annum of LNG is imported into India currently and almost 80 per cent of these imports come to Petronet's two terminals (at Dahej in Gujarat and Kochi in Kerala)," he said.
Tripathi said Dahej capacity will be raised by 50 per cent to 15 million tons by December 2016 and a further expansion to 17.5 million tons is planned.