With Oil Minister M Veerappa Moily approving of the remedial measures that were pending for nearly 18 months, RIL-BP last week added the first production well on the block in more than four years to ramp up output by over 15 per cent to 13.7 million standard cubic metres per day.
This well, which will add up to two mmmscmd to the output, as well as water pluggings adding smaller volumes, could have come a year back and averted complete stoppage of gas supplies to power plants.
In between, they will also install a compressor at the onshore terminal to pull the gas up from the wells that are over a kilometre below the sea.
On MA field, also in KG-D6 block, RIL-BP added the MA-8 well on January 2 and plan to do drill a branch well (called side tracking) later this year by re-entering a shut well. He said, "this is part of the next phase of producing the gas in the MA field after the oil has been produced".
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The KG-D6 fields had scaled to become India's largest producing gas fields in March 2010 but in less than a year it witnessed unanticipated water and sand ingress shutting down well after well.
BP, which bought 30 per cent stake in KG-D6 and 20 other blocks of RIL for USD 7.2 billion, flew in a number of experts from its worldwide operations and on its part RIL experts engaged at BP's deep water technical facilities in Sunbury, UK and in Houston, Texas to look for remedies.
However, approvals for the remedial actions which otherwise should have come as part of routine annual budgets, were blocks by both the Directorate General of Hydrocarbons and the Oil Ministry over a dispute about CAG auditing RIL accounts. This resulted in the shut-in of more wells.
With 10 out of the 18 wells on D1&D3 shutting down and a third of the six on MA closed due to water and sand ingress, there appeared on the horizon a situation where systems would shutdown if just a tenth of the gas flowed in a design capacity of 80 mmscmd.