Indian Natural Gas Market, Global LNG Trade Dynamics and Economic viability of R-LNG in India

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The share of LNG in total natural gas consumption in India reached 25.5% in FY12 and increased to 30% in FY13. The fall in domestic gas production in recent years has forced many gas consumers to evaluate the viability of using R-LNG to bridge the gap. The government's decision to increase the price of domestic natural gas from April 2014 has further complicated things for natural gas consumers. Domestic gas prices are expected to double to around $8.5/MMBTU from $4.2/MMBTU currently. The domestic gas production is not expected to increase substantially over the next 3-4 years.

Keeping in view the scarcity of domestic gas, this report has assessed the competitiveness of imported LNG with various liquid fuels based on the energy content and price. Based on the price of alternative fuels, the viability of using imported natural gas for various industries has been analysed.

Gas based power stations around the country are operating at low PLF's due to unavailability of gas and are in danger of defaulting on their debts. Gas based power plants will find it extremely difficult to compete with coal power plants in the future. The recent debacle in the power sector will reduce the pace of investment in gas power plants. With coal prices in the range of $2-3/MMBTU, domestic gas priced at $8.5/MMBTU and imported gas price of $16-20/MMBTU, the cost of generation from gas power plants will be significantly higher than that of coal power plants.

The fertilizer sector will also have to adapt to the new pricing paradigm. Naphtha prices are currently trading around $26-27/MMBTU in India but the subsidies doled out by the government makes it a viable option when compared to Natural gas. Natural gas becomes uneconomical for the fertilizer sector at import prices of about $19-20/MMBTU. Under these circumstances, fertilizer producers may find it cheaper to set up plants in the US and Canada to take advantage of the low gas prices prevailing in North America and then import the finished products into India.

Sectors such as Steel, Refineries and CGD had to increase dependence on imported LNG in FY 2013 as they are assigned a lower priority in gas allocation as per the government's gas utilization policy. The CGD sector used imported LNG to fulfill more than half of its gas requirements in FY12 and FY13. The share of imported LNG in the refineries and steel sectors was around 65-75% in FY12 and increased to around 75- 80% in FY13. At high LNG prices of around $20/MMBTU, refineries may find it more economical to replace natural gas with Furnace Oil to reduce costs.

Source: Business Wire

India’s biggest energy project has produced more squabbles than gas

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IF YOU look north from a helicopter hovering 30km (19 miles) off India’s east coast, the Bay of Bengal looks just as it must have done centuries ago. Tiny fishing boats with white sails pitch and yaw across the ocean. But look down and you will see the new India. A landing pad says “Dhirubhai” in big letters—the name of the founder of Reliance Industries. His son, Mukesh Ambani, now runs the firm (which is India’s second-most-valuable), and is India’s richest man.

The helipad sits on a vast processing ship. Oil and gas rise from the seabed 1km down. The vessel siphons off the oil while the gas is piped onshore. It is one part of an $11 billion project by Reliance and BP, a British oil giant, which was hailed as the answer to India’s energy problems—and is now embroiled in controversy.

When Reliance found gas in 2002 in a block called KGD6, it was the world’s biggest gas discovery that year and India’s largest since the 1970s. For the country it was wonderful news. Rather than import oil from the Middle East, blowing a hole in the balance of payments, or burn more filthy local coal, India could, it seemed, turn to a cheap and clean source of energy.

The discovery also showcased the power of India’s private sector. For decades Soviet-style state-run oil firms had searched for offshore energy. Only one big field, off the coast of Mumbai, had ever entered production, in the 1970s. After sporadic exploration efforts over the years, the big global energy firms had dismissed India as a barren place.

Dhirubhai Ambani, who had started his working life in a lowly job with Shell in Yemen, disagreed. He asked the experts, “How come God made India with no oil or gas?” When a new licensing regime came into place in 1999-2000, he piled in. Reliance bought 16 exploration blocks in two auctions, even as the global firms shied away, deterred by a low oil price and India’s patchy record. Dhirubhai died in July 2002. Four months later his company struck gold.

What was good for India was good for Reliance. As excitement built, analysts began to speculate that the firm might eventually evolve into the next “major” energy firm, rivalling the likes of Shell, Total and Exxon Mobil. As late as December 2009 Dhirubhai’s dream seemed on track. That month tests at KGD6 yielded production of 80 million standard cubic metres per day (mscmd). Huge capital investments had been made onshore in anticipation of a flood of gas, including at least $15 billion in gas-fired electricity plants built by a variety of power firms. The Ambanis spent $2 billion-3 billion on a new cross-country gas pipeline (owned by them rather than by Reliance at regulators’ insistence, they say).

That euphoria is long gone. Production started falling in late 2010 and today stands 80% below the peak. When KGD6 was first being developed Reliance reckoned it might contain 10 trillion cubic feet of gas. Proven and probable reserves today are just 3 trillion. Power plants lie idle. And Reliance is under fierce attack from some officials and politicians. Arvind Kejriwal is the leader of Aam Aadmi, an anti-corruption party that is contesting the national elections due in April and May. He thinks the gasfields are a giant scam.

What went wrong? An old saying about India is that whatever you say about the country is true—and its opposite. In this case two violently different views exist. The first is conspiratorial. It accuses Reliance of “gold-plating”. Under the production-sharing contract that governs the block, it can recoup its costs before any profits are split with the state. India’s national auditor has implied that Reliance deliberately inflated its costs, and hinted that it thinks some of the contractors used were secretly related to Reliance.

Worse still, Reliance is accused by some of holding India to ransom, deliberately suppressing production of gas until it could get a higher price for it. Under the original contract Reliance receives a “market-based” price, which in reality is set by the government. Until March this was fixed at $4.20 per million British Thermal Units (BTU), about a quarter of the price India pays for imports of liquefied natural gas. From April a new formula will apply, partly based on global benchmarks, which should see the price rise to about $8.

A disgraceful stitch-up, say anti-graft campaigners. They argue that Reliance, with its cash-rich balance-sheet and legacy of political influence, had every incentive to suppress production until it could bully the government to raise prices. In support of this view they point to the presence of BP. It bought into the project in 2011, as production was falling, at a valuation (it paid $7 billion for a 30% stake) that implied it was still a raging success. By this account the British firm knew that there would be a short-term “crisis” in output—and that once gas prices in India rose to more attractive levels the field’s production would miraculously “recover”.

It is hard for outsiders to evaluate the geology of KGD6; Reliance and its partners say that water had flooded parts of the field, giving a misleading initial impression of its potential, and that some gas pockets are isolated and hard to get to. But the conspiracy theory does, in totality, look implausible. On the charge of gold-plating, most analysts concede that there are some scenarios in which the small print of the production-sharing contract could give Reliance an incentive to overinvest. But most also think it almost impossible to fine-tune a big project to exploit these theoretical gains. Costs shot up because there was a global boom, inflating the price of hiring drilling rigs and equipment.

Besides denying all other wrongdoing, Reliance’s exasperated executives say it is ridiculous to suggest that contracts were handed to related parties. One of the contractors in question is Aker, a listed Norwegian firm no more related to Reliance than Roald Amundsen was to Gandhi.

What about the charge that production was deliberately suppressed, with BP as supposed partner in crime? Past and present executives at the British firm say that it knew when it signed the deal that the geology in KGD6 was tricky—it was brought in partly because of its expertise in subsea fields. It paid top dollar partly for the exploration potential in the five other blocks that Reliance and its partners still control today and partly for the potential of a “downstream” joint venture for marketing gas.

The financial incentives of the main players do not support the idea of a stitch-up. Mr Ambani has lost out on the gas pipeline he owns personally, which is thought barely to break even. His foreign partners were under pressure to maximise short-term profits, not feign a production slump. After the Deepwater Horizon accident in April 2010, BP faced a liquidity squeeze, a huge cash drain from litigation payments and the threat of a takeover. The smallest partner in the field is Niko Resources, a Canadian firm with a 10% stake. Its shares have fallen by 98% since 2010 and it has suffered financing problems.

Underwater in more ways than one
It is not clear that the project will make an acceptable return on capital, even at the higher gas price. Total cumulative capital investments will amount to $15 billion-20 billion, the bulk of them made before 2013. Estimates vary wildly, but total gross profits might amount to $20 billion-30 billion, most of them generated after 2016. Taking into account the time value of money, and income tax, the project could well be an example of value-destruction, not profiteering. ONGC, India’s largest state-owned energy firm, says some offshore discoveries are only viable at a gas price of $11 per BTU, well above the new price that Reliance will be receiving. (Since their gas production exceeds that of Reliance, ONGC and other state-run energy firms will be the main beneficiaries of the planned price rise.)

For now Reliance is trying to raise the output of existing fields and bring new ones online. In May it announced a “significant” discovery 4.5km below sea level, underneath the main field in the KGD6 block. BP expects the production of their joint venture to recover to 40-50mscmd by 2018. But the political and regulatory risks are acute. The consortium may be asked to provide bank guarantees to the government, so that any extra revenue from the gas-price rise can be clawed back if Reliance is found to have suppressed production or inflated costs. Campaigners are asking the courts to intervene. The government may yet abandon the price rise, or rip up the production-sharing contracts.

There are two lessons from the episode. The first is for India, an energy-hungry country whose vast east-coast waters now have only three deepwater rigs, from a peak of 13, according to one executive’s estimates. The main barrier to attracting more investment is not geology, but politics and regulation. The country combines the worst of both worlds—nit-picking day-to-day regulation and long-term uncertainty.

The second lesson is for Reliance. Secretive, clannish and forceful, it used to be both famed and resented for its ability to work the government behind the scenes. Now, in an era of activism against business and popular demands for transparency, this heritage is a liability. Even when the firm has a plausible case, few listen. Reliance is sitting on a huge reservoir—of mistrust. As well as drilling more gas beneath the Bay of Bengal, Mr Ambani needs to dig deep and modernise his firm.

Source: The Economist

Opinion sought on new gas price for RIL partners

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The Petroleum and Natural Gas Ministry has sought a legal opinion on the issue of whether Reliance Industries Limited's (RIL's) partners – BP and Niko Resources of Canada – could be given the new gas price effective from April 1 as they are not part of the ongoing arbitration proceedings between RIL and government.

Officials in the Petroleum Ministry said the Ministry had approached the Law Ministry seeking a view on not only how to go about the gas price hike issue for the two entities along with RIL but also on the exact calculation of the bank guarantee to be sought from RIL for the purported shortfall in gas production in the KG basin till it is independently verified that the drop in production is due to geological reasons and not done deliberately.

In a statement here, BP said that it along with RIL and Niko were contractors and producers of gas from the D1 and D3 fields under the KG-D6 block Production Sharing contract (PSC). ``BP, RIL and Niko are working closely with the Government to implement the gas pricing guidelines 2014 in accordance with this decision of the Government. According to the recently notified India Domestic Gas Pricing Guideline 2014, the pricing formula applies for all gas produced in India effective April 1, 2014. As to the D1 and D3 gas discoveries, these guidelines become applicable subject to the submission of a bank guarantee in a manner to be notified separately,'' the statement added.

However, it is learnt that the view within the Petroleum Ministry is that Cabinet had given its nod for gas price hike for RIL subject to furnishing of bank guarantee and both BP and Niko Resources will have to join the arbitration proceedings to stake their claim for the new gas price. ``We have already conveyed this to the two partners and told them that they have no alternative but to join the arbitration proceedings and we are eagerly awaiting the legal opinion before proceeding further on this issue. We are also awaiting a word on bank guarantee issue and how it has to be calculated,'' the official added.

RIL had dragged the ministry to arbitration in 2012, saying the contract does not provide for levy of a $1.8 billion penalty for output not being in line with projected production profile.

Source: The Hindu

BP, Niko to formally join RIL arbitration against Govt

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British energy giant BP and Niko Resources of Canada are likely to formally join their partner Reliance Industries' arbitration against government levying penalties for KG-D6 gas production falling short of target.

Faced with a situation where the near double gas rate of $8 per million British thermal unit from next month not accruing to them, BP and Niko are said to be planning to formally issue a Notice of Arbitration (NoA).

Sources said the Cabinet had in December last year stipulated that the new gas rate will apply to all producers except eastern offshore KG-D6 block where the contractor, which is fighting government against levying penalties for output shortfall, will have to give bank guarantees equivalent to the incremental revenue it would get from the new rates.

If it is proved that the company deliberately produced less gas from the D1&D3 fields in KG-D6, the bank guarantee will be encashed, depriving RIL of the incremental revenue.

While RIL agreed to the condition, the Oil Ministry felt the bank guarantees cannot be taken from BP and Niko since they are not part of the arbitration, sources said.

In absence of BP-Niko not being part of arbitration, it was being mulled that their share of incremental revenues from the higher gas price can be put in an escrow account during the pendency of the arbitration.

RIL, which is the operator of KG-D6 block with 60% interest, will however get all the revenues after furnishing bank sureties.

To break the impasse, BP and Niko, which together hold the remaining 40% in KG-D6, separately wrote to the ministry. They said that RIL, in filing the arbitration notice, had acted as an operator representing the interests of all the KG-D6 constituents and they were part of the arbitration.

BP and Niko further stated that as a contractor to the production sharing contract (PSC) they are party to the arbitration and RIL has represented them as per the PSC and JOA (Joint Operating Agreement), sources said.

Sources said since the ministry is not convinced by the mere letter, BP and Niko may now formally join the arbitration after dashing off a NoA.

RIL and BP say the decline in current D1&D3 output to one-tenth of the previously projected 80 million standard cubic metres per day was purely because of unanticipated geological complexities such as a drop in reservoir pressure and ingress of water and sand.

RIL had dragged the ministry to arbitration in 2012, saying the contract does not provide for levy of a $1.8 billion penalty for output not being in line with projected production profile.

Also, BP and Niko had previously submitted that the decision of the tribunal on the gas output issue would be binding on both of them.

Source: Business Standard

Increasing Domestic Production to Spur Natural Gas Market in India, Says TechSci Research

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Burnaby, Canada, March 15, 2014 --(PR.com)-- The demand for natural gas is increasing significantly in India due to various factors such as rising concerns towards carbon emissions coupled with the country’s increasing production and infrastructure development. In India, the major natural gas application areas include power generation, transportation, domestic fuel, and fertilizers. Over the next five years, the demand from these sectors is forecast to remain robust. Benefits such as cost-effectiveness, clean burning and safety in operations as compared to other conventional fuels is driving the demand for natural gas in the country.

An increase in natural gas production by leading companies such as RIL (Reliance India Limited), ONGC (Oil and Natural Gas Corporation) and Cairn India Limited is expected to increase the consumption of natural gas. Natural gas production from unconventional resources and imports in the form of LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas) are also forecast to rise in order to bridge the natural gas demand-supply gap in the country.

According to the recently published report by TechSci Research, “India Natural Gas Market Forecast & Opportunities, 2019,” the country’s natural gas market, in production volume terms, is projected to grow at a CAGR of around 26% during 2014-19. Currently, GAIL (India) Limited is the leading transmission company operating the largest pipeline network in the country. The distribution of natural gas to the end users is being majorly done by City Gas Distribution companies such as Mahanagar Gas Limited (MGL) and Indraprastha Gas Limited (IGL).

The report reveals that the country’s western region has the highest consumption of natural gas, and the region is expected to remain the leader over the forecast period 2014-19. However, southern region is growing with significant pace on account of presence of KG basin and expanding pipeline network. The government is also promoting the usage of natural gas by implementing new pricing mechanism, which would be effective from 1st April, 2014.

“In India’s natural gas market, power generation accounts for the highest consumption of natural gas, predominantly due to the environmental and economic benefits offered by natural gas in power production. The power generation sector is expected to remain the largest consuming sector due to anticipated commissioning of a number of natural gas power plants in the country over the next five years,” said Mr. Karan Chechi, Research Director with TechSci Research, a research based global management consulting firm.

“India Natural Gas Market Forecast & Opportunities, 2019” has analyzed the potential of the natural gas market and provides statistics and information on market sizes, shares and trends. The report will suffice in providing the intending clients with cutting-edge market intelligence and help them in taking sound investment decisions. Besides, the report also identifies and analyzes the emerging trends along with essential drivers and key challenges faced by the industry.

Source: PR.com

For gas, turn to the US

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The US is surging ahead as an energy producer, even as world gas prices are slated to rise. Now is the time to team up

The development of unconventional oil and gas in US has had a significant impact on oil and gas markets across the world. It has changed the rules of LNG trade, with geopolitical and economic implications. With the world’s third highest crude oil production at 7.7 million barrels/day and a gas output of nearly 1,883 mmscmd (million standard cubic metres per day), the world’s largest consumer of energy is now being talked about as a possible net exporter of energy by 2032.

India with its growing middle class, increased industrialisation and the spiralling demands on energy, is looking to learn from, collaborate and partner with the US.As a non-FTA country, India has successfully inked a gas trade agreement with two terminals on the eastern sea board. We are optimistic that this would be expanded to include other terminals as well.

Technology advantage

The US has certain inherent advantages which has enabled the meteoric rise of unconventional oil and gas supplies. Some of these such as sparsely populated land acreages and availability of large quantities of water cannot be easily replicated. Others such as a policy which encourages private investment towards development of innovative exploration technology, can be adapted to leverage regional strengths and nuances. India and the US have complementary strengths in manpower expertise, technology research and customisation, presence of service provider companies and smaller and medium enterprises. This portends an almost unlimited potential for the countries to enter into mutually beneficial partnerships.

India’s energy sector has been in a constant uphill struggle to address the challenges of adequate fuel supply, enabling transport infrastructure and creating a policy framework which encourages a much higher domestic and foreign investment. While we look towards taking our engagement with US to a new orbit, our efforts towards strengthening the national energy ecosystem remains a matter of priority. In this regard there is a renewed thrust towards creating a national gas grid, which would enable a price discovery mechanism based on supply-demand fundamentals.

Price advantage

The emerging hydrocarbon landscape across central Asia and Africa makes it possible for India and the US to explore joint venture opportunities in developing oil and gas assets in these economies.

This along with securing more non-FTA approvals and collaboration in technology transfer and infrastructure development could be considered as discussion points at the forthcoming Indo-US energy dialogue.

The US-based Henry Hub, which is currently at a price band of $3-5/mmbtu, gives a clear and competitive advantage against East Asian landed LNG prices which are nearing $20/mmbtu. Japanese energy demands post Fukushima, JCC indexation of LNG and the increased focus on cleaner gas based power across Asian countries is expected to keep the price of LNG high in the coming years. Hence, the need for a special long-term arrangement with the US.

India's LNG needs are largely met by just a few countries in the middle-eastern region.

The US with its existing LNG infrastructure of 12 terminals, backed up by robust gas pipeline network, provides for a lucrative export market for energy deficit countries like India.

The developments over the past decade in the US energy sector reaffirms our belief in the country’s ability to meet the world’s energy challenges.

Source: The Hindu Business line

India Natural Gas Market Forecast and Opportunities, 2019

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Natural gas accounts for around 10% share of the overall energy consumption in India. Widening demand and supply gap has resulted in increasing natural gas imports in the form of LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas). The natural gas imports are expected to rise significantly over the next five years. The rising concern of Green House Gas emissions and low price of natural gas is driving the demand for natural gas in India. Government is promoting natural gas production in India by introducing new pricing policy for the players producing domestically. Also, the government is encouraging the production from unconventional resources such as Coalbed Methane (CBM) and shale gas. The pipeline network is rapidly expanding, with new pipelines planned to be commissioned during the next five years. Moreover, the expansion plans of existing pipeline system are already under process. The western region leads in-terms of pipeline infrastructure, while southern and eastern regions have limited pipeline availability. New pipelines are planned in the eastern and southern regions, which would facilitate the supply natural gas to various cities in these regions.

According to "India Natural Gas Market Forecast & Opportunities, 2019", the Indian natural gas market is projected to grow at a CAGR of around 26% during 2014-19. The demand for natural gas is majorly driven by power generation segment, due to increasing gas based power plants and availability of natural gas to existing plants, which are currently operating below the design capacity. The LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas) terminal at Dahej, Gujarat operated by PLL (Petronet LNG Limited) is the largest LNG importing destination in the country. The terminal capacity has been recently expanded to 10 MMTPA (Million Metric Tons Per Annum) from 5 MMTPA. The operations at PLL's recently commissioned Dhabol and Kochi terminals have also commenced. The capacity of Hazira Terminal, operated by Hazira LNG & Port, has also been expanded to 5 MMTPA. New terminals have been planned by companies such as PLL, GSPC and GAIL at Ganagavaram, Mundra and Paradip, respectively. 

Source: PRNewswire

Gas price hike to benefit ONGC, Oil India more: RIL to SC

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Oil and gas major  Reliance Industries  (RIL) today told the Supreme Court that gas price hike will benefit ONGC  , Oil India   more as they produce more than 70 percent of India’s gas requirement. The new gas price regime is effective from April 1. CPI leader Gurudas Dasgupta and Prashant Bhushan have called for a stay on the new gas price regime .

The duo are accusing the Centre of colluding with Reliance and hiking the price of gas to provide windfall gains to the company. Reliance has rubbished all these allegations. The hearing in the gas price hike case went on from 10:30 am to 4 pm. Biggest of lawyers are involved in this case and daily hearings have begun with litigant Gurudas Gupta's lawyer Colin Gonsalves beginning the arguments. Gonsalves spoke about how chief ministers in Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh have written letters to the Centre saying how Rs 40,000 crore of investments made in the power sector now stands stranded. Harish Salve, the counsel for Reliance Industries, spoke just a little bit to counter Gonsalves.

 He said that because of technical reasons production has fallen. Commenting on the entire issue, RS Sharma, former chairman of ONGC, agrees that ONGC will benefit the most from this move. He says last week the new ONGC chairman had said that this new gas price will translate to additional revenues of Rs 16000 crore per annum for the company. But the more pertinent issue, according to Sharma, is the legality of the issue. He says the production sharing contract was signed after proper validation by the law ministry and after approval by Cabinet Committee. Based on the open offer, the parties participated in the auction, now the main point is about the sanctity of the contract having being signed, he explains. So leaving aside the commercial issues, the sanctity of the contract is most important - there is the question of the credibility of the sovereign government – it has to be honoured.

 He says it is more important to implement the contract (production sharing contract) in its true spirit. SC Tripathi, former oil secretary, explains that in a previous judgment in 2009-10, the Supreme Court had ruled that all natural resources belong to the government. "According to SC, even operator’s share doesn’t belong to the operator, the government is the owner, until it reaches the consumer," he adds. Now since the government is the owner, it has to decide the price, thus dragging the CAG and the Parliament into the picture to look into the costing. Now since the operator cannot decide the price and whom to mark it, the government has to decide based on investment and costing, says Tripathi. So unless the SC revisits its earlier decision, the production sharing contract in the original spirit will not work, he add

Source: MoneyControl

TOYO Awarded LNG Regasification Plant Project in India

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Toyo Engineering Corporation (TOYO, President and CEO Katsumoto Ishibashi) has been awarded a regasification plant project by Petronet LNG Ltd, India. The plant is to be constructed at Dahej, located in the State of Gujarat on the west coast of India, to expand the LNG receiving capacity from 10 million tons to 15 million tons per year. Toyo-India will lead EPC work on a turnkey basis, from engineering to construction and commissioning. The plant is scheduled to be completed at the beginning of 2017.

Construction of Dahej Terminal (original capacity: 5 million tons per year), the first LNG receiving terminal in India, was awarded in 2000 to a consortium consisting of current IHI Corporation, TOYO, ITOCHU Corporation, and Mitsui & Co., Ltd. In 2006, a consortium of IHI and TOYO received an order again to expand the receiving capacity. To meet the growing demand of natural gas for electricity and fertilizer, more than 10 additional LNG import terminals are now planned to be built in India. TOYO will actively develop its business activities in India, striving to receive orders related to these LNG receiving terminal projects.

Source: www.toyo-eng.co.jp

India, U.S. energy talks today

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New Delhi is expected to seek a waiver from Washington to enable investments in its upstream oil and gas sector, during India-U.S. energy dialogue on Monday.
The two sides will discuss one little-known aspect of U.S. policies that still stands in the way of finalising India’s investment decisions in the U.S. upstream oil and gas sector, including in shale gas. This pertains to Indian oil investments and operations in countries such as Sudan that were sanctioned by the U.S.
In addition to discussing upstream oil and gas investment that includes waiver due to legacy operations in sanctioned countries, the talks between U.S. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz and Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia will touch on liquefied natural gas (LNG) and shale oil.
Indian companies have signed an off-take agreement with a U.S. company for the supply of 3.5 million metric tonnes of LNG per annum. More significantly, this is the first LNG project in the U.S. with non-Free Trade Agreement (FTA) authorisation. According to the U.S. policy, a special waiver is required for countries interested in purchasing U.S. oil and gas but do not have a bilateral FTA.
An Indian company has taken a 20 per cent participatory interest in a shale gas asset, where it will second its employees for getting know-how about shale gas exploration and production.
On the political side, this is the first ministerial visit from the U.S. after the logjam in bilateral ties caused by the arrest and handcuffing of Indian diplomat Devyani Khobragade last December in New York. Last week, a senior U.S. Foreign Ministry official in-charge for India had visited New Delhi to hold talks with Foreign Secretary Sujatha Singh and officials.
On the strategic front, energy policies of both countries, security of supply and strategic oil reserves will form part of the talks as will discussion on South Asia regional energy integration, including promoting intra-regional energy trade.
The Indo-U.S. Energy Dialogue began in 2005, but gathered pace in recent years because of two major developments — Washington’s desire to persuade countries like India that were major buyers of Iranian crude to curtail their purchases and the discovery of huge shale gas reserves in the U.S.. While restrictions on Iran have receded and India has stepped up oil purchases from the country, many issues remain to be discussed on the question of Indian investments in the hydrocarbon sector as well as sorting out global issues in energy supply.
India and the U.S. will also touch on issues associated with civilian use of nuclear energy and its control and the exchanges between the U.S.’ Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and India’s Department of Atomic Energy and the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board.
Source: The Hindu

India state-owned oil firm enters LNG export partnership in B.C.

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Progress Energy Canada Ltd. says state-owned Indian Oil Corporation Ltd. has entered an agreement to join a liquefied natural gas (LNG) export partnership in British Columbia.
According to Progress Energy, the largest oil and gas firm in India will acquire a 10 per cent interest in its B.C. natural gas reserves and its proposed Pacific NorthWest LNG export facility.
Indian Oil has also agreed to offtake 1.2 million tons of LNG a year—approximately 10 per cent of the facility’s capacity—for a minimum of 20 years.
Progress Energy, a subsidiary of Malaysia’s Petronas, wants to build the facility near Prince Rupert, B.C., to ship LNG to lucrative Asian markets.
The company said the proposed project is undergoing reviews by both the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency (CEAA) and B.C. Environmental Assessment Office (EAO) after receiving an export licence from the National Energy Board (NEB) in December 2013.
It hopes to begin exporting gas from the facility in late 2018.
LNG would move to the Prince Report facility via TransCanada Corp.’s proposed North Montney Maineline and Prince Rupert Gas Transmission (PRGT) projects that are currently before the NEB for review.
The 305-kilometre North Montney line would run from the Fort St. John, B.C., area near the Alberta border where it would connect with the PRGT line.
That would then move LNG to the proposed export facility.
TransCanada estimates the North Montney line, an extension of its existing Groundbirch pipeline, would cost approximately $1.5-billion to build.
No cost estimates were provided for the PRGT line.
Petronas estimates the total capital cost for the project to be in the neighbourhood of $36-billion.
“Each of these major investments in British Columbia underscores the globally attractive and competitive opportunities for Canadian natural gas in the Pacific Rim,” Progress Energy president and CEO Michael Culbert said in a statement.
Japan Petroleum Exploration Co., Ltd. (JAPEX) owns a 10 per cent stake in the partnership.

Source: Canadian Manufacturing.

RIL-BP working to extend life of gas fields in KG-D6 block

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BP, Europe's second-largest oil company, is working with Reliance Industries to extend the life of producing gas fields in the Bay of Bengal KG-D6 block.

BP, which bought a 30 per cent stake in RIL's 21 oil and gas blocks, including KG-D6, for USD 7.026 billion in 2011, is working with RILBSE 5.72 % to arrest the output decline in the fields.

"Following approval by the relevant authorities in 2012, a number of activities are being progressed to arrest the decline in production rates and to extend the life of the block KG-D6 producing fields. These include new work-over wells and the installation of additional compression and water handling capacity," BP said in its 2013 annual report.

RIL is the operator of the KG-D6 block with a 60 per cent stake while Niko Resources of Canada holds 10 per cent.

The KG-D6 fields, which began production in April 2009, hit a peak output of 69.43 mmscmd in March 2010 before water and sand ingress led to more than a third of the wells shutting down.

D1&D3, the largest of the 18 gas discoveries in the block, produced 66.35 mmscmd, while 3.07 mmscmd came from the MA field, the only oil discovery in the block. Output dropped to about 11.7 mmscmd last year. Remedial steps helped reverse the declining trend and output rose to 13.6 mmscmd last month.

"In 2013 we made two significant gas and condensate discoveries in the Krishna-Godavari basin and the Cauvery basin (blocks KG-D6 and CYD5), a key milestone for our partnership with Reliance," BP said.

These resources have the potential to help meet India's growing demand for energy, increase gas supplies to the market from 2018 and improve the country's energy security, it said.

"Along with our exploration efforts to find new oil and gas, we aim to add value to our existing production in India by developing the gas we have already discovered," it said. "We continue to grow our exploration position using our leading subsurface capabilities."


RIL-BP have surrendered most of the 21 blocks they partnered in 2011 as they did not hold commercially viable oil and gas. They currently hold only six blocks.

In May, RIL and its partners announced a significant gas and condensate discovery in the KG-D6 block. In August, RIL and BP announced a new gas condensate discovery in the deepwater CYD5 block in the Cauvery basin, off the east coast.

"In August the government approved the field development plan for the R-Series project in the KG-D6 block and has reviewed the appraisal plan for the KG-D6 discovery," it said.

BP said its board met for the first time in India in 2013 to gain an understanding of the opportunities and challenges in the country. Board members visited the Kakinada onshore terminal which receives gas from the KG-D6 fields and discussed the geological complexities off the east coast with RIL representatives.

Source: ET

Petronas to Sign With India Buyer March 7 for Canada Gas Stake

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Petroliam Nasional Bhd., Malaysia’s state oil company, will sign an agreement to sell 10 percent of its liquefied natural gas project in Canada to an Indian company on March 7, its chief executive officer said.

Petronas, as the company is known, may also sell 15 percent stake in the Pacific NorthWest LNG project to an Asian buyer by the end of this month, CEO Shamsul Azhar Abbas told reporters in Kuala Lumpur today, after the company reported a 58 percent increase in fourth-quarter profit. It is allocating an additional two percent to Brunei National Petroleum Co., which already owns three percent.

“We have more or less concluded it with the Indian company,” Shamsul said, without naming the buyer. “That’s a done deal.”

Petronas acquired control of the project through its C$5.2 billion ($4.7 billion) takeover of Canada’s Progress Energy Resources Corp. in 2012, making it the second-biggest shareholder in British Columbia’s Montney shale-gas area. The Kuala Lumpur-based company aims to reduce its share in Pacific NorthWest LNG, which runs a gas export facility, to as low as 50 percent by selling stakes to Asian gas buyers, the unit’s President Greg Kist said in November.

Indian Oil Corp., the nation’s biggest refiner, has lined up a $900 million one-year bridge loan to fund a planned purchase of a stake in Petronas’s Canadian gas projects, three people familiar with the matter said last month.

Japan Petroleum Exploration Co. bought a 10 percent stake in the project last year. The Canadian asset will produce as much as 19.68 million metric tons of LNG a year for 25 years starting in 2018, according to an application to the country’s National Energy Board.

Portfolio Review

Petronas, which plans to spend a record 300 billion ringgit ($91 billion) to replenish Malaysia’s diminishing reserves, has embarked on a worldwide review of its portfolio since Shamsul took over four years ago. It exited projects in countries including Ethiopia, East Timor and Pakistan, while acquiring oil and gas blocks in Canada, Australia and Brunei.

The company is seeking to sell stakes in exploration and production projects in Vietnam, three people with knowledge of the matter said Feb. 26, asking not to be identified because of the information is private. The sale may be at least $300 million, one of the people said.

Petronas signed a memorandum of understanding with Argentina’s state-controlled YPF SA last month to jointly develop a 187 square-kilometer (72 square miles) area in Vaca Muerta for shale oil. The Argentine producer is seeking shale partners to develop Vaca Muerta, an area the size of Belgium that contains at least 23 billion barrels of oil, drawing companies including Chevron Corp.

Fourth Quarter

Net income at the Malaysian explorer climbed to 9.58 billion ringgit in the three months through December from a restated 6.06 billion ringgit a year earlier, according to a statement released today in Kuala Lumpur.

Revenue rose 10 percent to 84.8 billion ringgit, driven by higher output of crude oil and processed gas sales volume, coupled with higher realized LNG prices and favorable dollar exchange rate movement against the ringgit.

Oil in New York trading averaged $97.61 a barrel during the three-month period, compared with $88.23 a year earlier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Total production rose to 2.21 million barrels a day of oil equivalent in the fourth quarter from 2.08 million last year, Petronas said.

Petronas will make a final decision on whether to proceed with a $20 billion refining and petrochemicals project in Pengerang in Malaysia’s southern Johor state bordering Singapore at the end of this month, Shamsul said. The company may not proceed with the plan if the costs and returns prove unfavorable, Shamsul said Aug. 26.

Taiwan’s Kuokuang Petrochemical Technology Co. scrapped its plan to build an integrated refining and petrochemical complex in the same area because the project is no longer competitive, shareholder CPC Corp. said Dec. 5. Thailand’s PTT Global Chemical Pcl canceled a plan to jointly spend on a petrochemical project with Petronas after a study showed chances of low returns, Reuters reported on Feb. 21, citing PTT CEO Bowon Vongsinudom.

Source: Bloomberg

Increase in gas prices to raise ONGC’s revenue by Rs. 16,000 cr

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Revenues of India’s largest oil and gas exploration company — Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) — will grow by Rs. 16,000 crore and net profit by nearly Rs. 9,600 crore following the increase in domestic gas prices to $8 per unit from $4.2 per unit from April 1, 2014.

However, most of this additional revenue would flow back to the government, the company’s largest shareholder, in form of higher taxes, royalty and dividend and the company’s net retention will be Rs. 5,200 crore, DK Sarraf, ONGC’s new chairman and MD said in his first media interaction after taking over the reins of the company on March 1.

Sarraf said while the price of $8 a unit appears to be substantial, it is still not sufficient to make all discoveries by ONGC viable. There were still few discoveries in the Mahanadi basin that are not viable at this price and would need a higher price of around $11 a unit, he added.

“Some of the gas may not be produced even at $8 a unit and will be monetised at a later stage,” the new CMD said.

Asked about claims made by the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) that the cost of gas production is just $1, he said production cost involves not just operating but exploration cost, development expenditure, facilities expense and interest cost as well.

ONGC’s cost of gas production is about $ 4 per unit and the company “hardly made any profit” at $4.2 rate, he said.

On the government’s decision to ask ONGC to pick up a 5% stake in sister oil PSU Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), Saraff said” “I was for picking up the entire 10% which is now being shared equally by ONGC and Oil India Ltd (OIL).”

“We should have picked up at least 7% as I am very upbeat on IOC,” he added. Domestic oil and gas production will continue to dominate ONGC’s growth plans, he added.

Source: HT

ONGC: Higher gas price is need of hour

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ONGC Chairman and Managing Director Dinesh K Sarraf said on Tuesday that there is a need for higher gas price to monetise discoveries. Sarraf took over as head of the country's largest explorer on March 1.

"We believe that price (new gas price from April 1) would be around $8 per mBtu. It appears to be quite significant, but it is not in reality," Sarraf told media persons.

Revenues

ONGC's revenue is expected to get a boost by Rs 4,000 crore per annum for every dollar increase in gas price. If new gas price is $8/mBtu from $4.2/mBtu now, the increase in revenue would be around Rs 16,000 crore, while increase in bottomline would be around Rs 9,600 crore. The net impact on cash balance would be Rs 5,200 crore, Sarraf said.

But there are still discoveries made by ONGC that are not viable at $8/mBtu. For example, two discoveries have been found in the Mahanadi Basin. "But these discoveries at Mahanadi are viable at gas price of $11/mBtu to have 10 per cent return," said NK Verma, Director (Exploration) of ONGC. The explorer will not able to monetise them till it gets a higher price.

ONGC targets to produce gas from Krishna Godavari basin by 2017.

Sarraf said that it is a myth that production is not going up. In fact, production is increasing at around 8 per cent. He said that his focus would be to achieve output of 130 million tonnes a year by 2030 from about 60 million tonnes at present.

Source: HBL

Reliance Industries can’t be blamed for dip in output from KG-D6 block: BP

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BP does not expect any company to drill in Indian deep-sea basins at the current gas price, and endorses Reliance Industries' view that it neither hoarded gas, nor can it be blamed for the sharp decline in natural gas output from the KG-D6 block.

Sashi Mukundan, who heads BP's Indian operations, remains upbeat about the global major's multi-billion investment in Reliance Industries' oil and gas blocks even though the Mukesh Ambani-controlled company has faced various regulatory hurdles and in the recent past has had to deal with relentless public attacks from Arvind Kejriwal's Aam Aadmi Party.

During his brief stint as the chief minister of Delhi, Kejriwal had ordered the state's anticorruption bureau to file an FIR against Ambani.

BP plans to invest $10 billion in the next five years and wants a trusting relationship with authorities. "We need to move things forward. We have to find a solution and move on. We must work under an umbrella of trust, like we are on the same side and not adversaries," Mukundan told ET. The spate of troubles for KG-D6 has not led to second thoughts, said Mukundan. "No. We are looking at India in the long-term perspective. In India, things take time but they are finally done," he said. Mukundan said the current price of gas makes investment in challenging, high-risk deepwater regions unviable.

This would hinder gas output and encourage import of costly liquefied natural gas, Mukundan said. "No company would invest in deep water at the current price level. If gas is not produced, then LNG imports will rise. Already 30% of India's gas demand is met from LNG. For BP, it doesn't really matter whether we sell gas from deepwater in India or bring gas from some other part of the world as LNG. The country has to take a decision," he said. BP feels Reliance's response to the barrage of allegation against the company is backed by technical and geological data as well as global experiences in producing oil and gas from deepsea fields.

RILBSE 0.53 % has been blamed and penalised by the government for the sharp fall in gas production from KG-D6 and is being made to wait nervously for the final go-ahead to charge higher gas prices next month and is facing a regular barrage of attacks.

Commenting on the decline in output, Mukundan said it is not fair to blame RIL for the fall in production because across the world, estimated output stipulated in the field-development plan (FDP) often turns out to be different  from the actual outcome. Asked if the production-sharing contract (PSC) envisaged estimated production as an enforceable commitment, as interpreted by the former oil minister Jaipal Reddy and India's oil and gas regulator, Mukundan said he disagreed with this reading. "The answer is no. There's nothing in the PSC that says field development plan is a commitment. Show me one place where it says actual production should be equal to field-development plan. (But) the good news is that there are cases where actual producti on should be equal to field-development plan. (But) the good news is that there are cases where actual production may be even better than the FDP."

RIL is waiting for the oil ministry to finalise the mechanism for bank guarantees it has to furnish to be eligible to charge the new gas price of around $8.40 from April 1. It has to furnish guarantees that will be encashed if it is proven that the company hoarded gas, or deliberately suppressed output as the Director General of Hydrocarbons suspects.

Mukundan said the company is accepting this so that it can move forward. "(Guarantees are) not a good precedent. Nowhere in the PSC does it say that the field development plan is a commitment.

A gas reservoir is not a biscuit factory where you can be sure that you put one kg of flour and 10 cookies will come out. You cannot say for sure till you start producing, but we don't have a choice as we have to move forward on this issue." BP's view on gas hoarding is that it is not possible to do this without getting detected. "If you are hoarding gas, it is easy to find out. If gas is being hoarded, the field will not see any pressure drop. It is not easy to just shut a well, as all wells behave differently. The pressure in the field is falling. We are worried that if we have a long-term shut-in for mechanical reasons, it will be very difficult to revive the field. We are struggling to produce and keep it going. From Day 1, BP said there were less than 3 tcf of recoverable reserves. We have never changed that. When we did the RIL deal in 2011, we had informed the (US regulator) SEC that the reserves are close to 3 tcf."

He said RIL may have been somewhat optimistic in assessing higher reserves. "But its earlier findings were validated by two globally renowned experts and the DGH. It's a well-known fact the world over that no field across the world produces the exact amount as predicted in early reserve estimates."

Source: ET

India sets new policy for geoscientific data generation

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India is seeking to accelerate exploration and production operations with a new policy on geoscientific data generation. The policy has a one-time project fee that replaces the model of profit-sharing after cost recovery.

The Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH) will administer the policy on behalf of the government of India, which will own the data. M. Veerapa Moily, minister of petroleum and natural gas, said permission for data surveys will be granted through a “nonexclusive multiclient survey agreement.”

Under the new policy, service providers will complete surveys within 2 years. Project fees will be $10,000 for the 2-year period. Agreements with service providers will remain valid for 12 years, and service providers will be free to license data to prospective E&P companies.

The survey period can be extended as long as 12 months by paying 60% of the project fee or pro rata. A data delivery bank guarantee of $100,000 will have to be provided by the service provider to DGH.
Moily said a significant part of India is available for exploration. Inviting private investors for exploration is handicapped by the nonavailability of data.

The new policy will be a cornerstone for promoting exploration and production activities, enabling generation of high-quality geo-scientific data in a speedy manner, and encouraging deployment of advanced proprietary technologies, according to the government’s press information bureau.

Source: Oil & Gas Journal