India’s Oil and Natural Gas Corp. Ltd. (ONGC) and Reliance Industries Ltd. (RIL) have started discussions with buyers to sell natural gas from their fields in the Bay of Bengal that are expected to start production over the next three years.
The plan is to transport the gas from the east coast to the industrial heart belt of western India, an ONGC executive told Reuters.
“We want to use the pipeline to reach customers in West India to sell gas from the KG [Krishna-Godavari] Basin. We are talking to some of them for contracts,” Shashi Shankar, chairman and managing director of ONGC, said on the margins of the International Energy Forum.
ONGC plans to use Reliance Industries’ 1,375-km pipeline connecting Kakinada on the east coast to Bharuch in Gujarat in the west.
Shankar said ONGC is committed to bring east coast gas onstream by 2019 onwards and ramp up production to about 15 million standard cubic meters per day (MMscm/d).
“We are discussing with customers on a regular basis...,” he said
Reliance built the pipeline in 2009, but has been operating at very low capacity utilization for several years due to a drastic fall in output from the company’s venture in the KG Basin in the Bay of Bengal.
Billionaire Mukesh Ambani-controlled Reliance Industries and partner BP Plc, which together own three natural gas fields next to ONGC’s in the east coast, has also started discussions with customers to market the natural gas, Sashi Mukundan, BP’s country head and regional president for India, told Reuters last week.
The RIL-BP joint venture is offering customers contracts ranging from a 10-year tenure, to 5- and 3-year, Mukundan said.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has set a target to increase the share of gas in India’s energy mix to 15% by 2030 from below 6.5% now.
The government in February approved a plan by Reliance Industries and its partner BP to develop two new fields in the Krishna-Godavari basin.
This approval followed an earlier clearance to develop another field called R-Series in the basin.
“At peak, 2022, we will produce 35 MMscm/d and would contribute almost 10% to country’s demand,” Mukundan said.
The long-term contracts that Reliance-BP joint venture is offering is a sign the companies are committed to fulfilling their contracts, Mukundan said.
“If we cannot deliver from our field, we will import and deliver,” he said. Between 2021 and 2023, India would be hitting at a level which will be 50 MMscm/d incremental.
So India would be producing in the range of 140 MMscm/d, said Atanu Chakraborty, said the head of Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH), India's upstream regulator.
India’s current total consumption of natural gas at end of March 2018 stood at 145 MMscm/d.
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