In a consultation paper, the Committee, which was last year formed to suggest 'Roadmap for Reduction in Import Dependency in Hydrocarbon Sector by 2030', said a cost-plus model for fixing natural gas prices as proposed by a Parliamentary Committee and some downstream industry players, may incentivise operators to gold-plate cost.
The panel submitted the consultation paper to the Oil Ministry last month with an request for putting it up on the ministry website for stakeholders to comment. The Ministry, however, is yet to web host it.
On the argument that a high price of natural gas may be economically unviable or unsustainable for sectors like fertilizer and power, the panel said, "it will be unfair to supply natural gas at artificially low prices to all consumers, including those who can afford to pay a higher price in order to support the priority sector."
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"Transition to market-determined producer prices of gas is essential to facilitate development of a gas market in the country by increasing the supply of domestic natural gas," it said, adding market-determined price would give higher incentive for E&P activity given a more balanced risk-reward equation for producers.
At the end of transitory period to market determined pricing, producer prices for natural gas should be "unfettered of any government intervention, allowing for gas pricing by producers on a market-determined basis through transparent arms length transactions," it said.
The Kelkar panel said the "market-determined gas pricing should apply to all forms of gas irrespective of the source.