With delays in regulatory nod and gas price revision frustrating its attempts to reverse falling gas output from Krishna Godavari-D6 field, BP chief Bob Dudley met petroleum minister Dharmendra Pradhan to press for early decisions.
Dudley, along with BP India head Sashi Mukundan, met Pradhan on the sidelines of the World Petroleum Congress here yesterday to make a case for early decisions, officials said. BP, which in 2011 bought 30 per cent stake in Reliance Industries' 21 oil and gas blocks, including KG-D6 for $7.2 billion, has been frustrated by the delays in getting approvals for plans to revive the sagging output from eastern offshore KG-D6 fields.
Officials said Dudley raised the issue of gas prices not being revised on the due date of April 1 as also KG-D6 revival plans getting stuck in redtape.
More From This Section
Approvals, however, for the plans did not come and it was only after with a vigorous push by the then Oil Minister
M Veerappa Moily that nod for routine works like annual expenditure plan came in the second half of 2013.
Sources said BP is keen that a decision on gas pricing be taken at the earliest so that its investment decisions can be firmed up.
Dudley had in an interaction at the WPC on Tuesday said the company was "disappointed" at the pace of approval in India said the new government must reform its gas price regime for survival of the gas industry.
"It has been disappointing, the pace at which certain things have been approved -- the price rising up towards a market price, there have been a number of delays in seabed surveys and the appraisals of various projects," Platts, a global provider of energy-related information, quoted Dudley as saying. BP, India's single largest foreign investor, and its partner RIL last month slapped an arbitration notice on the government for delay in revision of prices that were due from April 1.