Business Standard

Old price, new terms

How government can solve the natural gas pricing problem

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Business Standard Editorial Comment New Delhi
The government's mismanagement of India's natural gas resources has clearly not run its course. The Union Cabinet had recently agreed to allow Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) to increase the price of gas from its fields in the Krishna-Godavari (KG) basin, provided it executed a bank guarantee that would cover its liability if charges of hoarding gas proved to be true. However, these terms do not seem to be applying to Reliance's partners in the field - Niko Resources and the international petrochemicals giant BP. Only RIL is part of the arbitration process for the dispute; Niko and BP aren't. Thus, according to recent reports, they may be excluded from the deal - and so the whole purpose of the Cabinet decision, which was to restore certainty to gas supply, has been thrown into jeopardy. RIL has a 60 per cent stake in the KG-D6 block production; BP has 30 per cent; and Niko has 10 per cent. For the already-explored and controversial D1 and D3 gas discoveries, the question is whether the agreement that RIL would, subject to an investigation of the accusations of hoarding, be allowed to sell gas at a higher price from D1 and D3 also applies to BP and Niko.
 

That the petroleum ministry failed to foresee this situation is quite in keeping with its completely haphazard and problematic approach to pricing KG gas. Various aspects have been the source of problems: the original production-sharing contract itself, which was open to exploitation by the producer; the inability of the government to independently determine the exact quantity of gas in the fields; and the questionable gas pricing formula suggested by the Rangarajan committee on pricing, which links the well-head price of domestically produced gas to the spot price of gas in some of the world's most expensive markets. It is this price that RIL hopes to receive now after the Cabinet has agreed to accept a bank guarantee to cover its liability; whether the bank guarantee is large enough is open to question, too.

Given the problems that the hasty acceptance of a flawed formula has caused, the government must reconsider its approach. Instead of working to determine whether Reliance is accurate in its claims that there is considerably less gas in the D1 and D3 fields of its blocks than it earlier estimated - an effort that is, clearly, beyond the government's capabilities or its willingness - it should use basic economic incentives. Here's what it should do: it should ensure that all gas that's produced from D1 and D3 is sold at the old price, of $4.2 per million metric British thermal units, instead of the higher price of around $8.4 per mmBtu. If it is indeed the case that there is not much gas in the D1 and D3 fields, RIL can benefit from the higher price as a result of new discoveries elsewhere in the block. If it is the case, however, that the government is right and there is more gas than RIL claims, then Reliance - and BP and Niko - will not benefit from any hoarding. This is one way to recover the situation, to correct past mismanagement, and answer political accusations of cronyism and corruption.

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First Published: Mar 04 2014 | 9:40 PM IST

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