Reliance Industries (RIL) and its partners, UK’s BP and Canada’s Niko Resources, might have to provide a maximum of $1.2 billion in bank guarantees over three years to get nearly double the rate for natural gas being produced from the main fields in KG-D6 block.
The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs had decided on December 20 to allow RIL to almost double the price of natural gas from April, provided the firm gave a bank guarantee to cover its liability if gas-hoarding charges are proved. The guarantee, equivalent to the incremental revenue RIL will get from the new gas price, will be encashed if it is proved the company hoarded gas or deliberately suppressed production at the Dhirubhai-1 and 3 (D1&D3) fields in the eastern offshore KG-D6 block since 2010-11, sources said.
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Considering that gas prices will rise from $4.2 a million British thermal unit to $8.2-8.4 after the Rangarajan pricing formula comes into effect from April, the bank guarantee — being the difference of current and new price — for every trillion cubic feet (tcf) of gas production will come to $4 billion. Sources said the guarantee for the entire remaining recoverable gas reserves of about 0.75 tcf in the D1&D3 fields comes to $3 billion. At current rate of production of about eight million standard cubic metres a day, D1&D3 will produce about 0.3 tcf in the next three years — the time that may be needed to settle the issue of gas hoarding charges. The guarantee for 0.3 tcf comes to $1.2 billion, they said. Of this, the share of RIL, which holds 60 per cent stake in KG-D6, will come to $60 million a quarter. BP has 30 per cent interest and the remaining 10 per cent is with Niko.
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While RIL blames unseen geological complexities for production not matching the pre-stated targets for D1&D3, the petroleum ministry and its technical arm the Directorate General of Hydrocarbons hold the company responsible for not drilling the committed number of wells, resulting in output fall. With both sides not budging, the issue has been referred to arbitration, which could take two to three years for a verdict.
Prodded by the finance ministry, the petroleum ministry had initially proposed to deny the new gas prices unless RIL either made up for the shortfall in output in the past three financial years, or it was proved the company was not responsible for production below target. The issue had held up notification of the new pricing formula that will be applicable to all producers — public and private — and all forms of gas —conventional and unconventional forms like coal-bed methane and shale gas. As a way out, it was proposed that RIL and its partners be asked to give bank guarantees for the incremental revenue they will get till the hoarding issue is resolved through arbitration by independent international experts.
The government in June approved the Rangarajan formula for pricing of all domestically produced natural gas at an average of global gas hub rates and price at which India imports LNG (gas in liquid form). The rate in April 2014, when the new pricing is to be implemented, will be about USD 8.2 to 8.4 as against the current USD 4.2. Prices of natural gas, which is an input for manufacturing fertiliser and electricity generation, will be revised every quarter based on the average of the past four quarters, with a gap of one quarter.