Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
KRISHNA-GODAVARI BASIN
Of the requirement
BACHELOR OF COMMERCE
IN
HONOURS
BY
RATHNASHEELAPATIL
(HALL TICKET NO.2008-1814)
MRS.RAJESHWARI
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
KOTI, HYDERABAD
MAY 2010
1
DECLARATION
2
OSMANIA UNIVERSITY COLLEGE FOR WOMENS
KOTI, HYDERABAD, AP
MAY 2010
CERTIFICATE
3
OSMANIA UNIVERSITY COLLEGE FOR WOMENS
KOTI, HYDERABAD, AP
MAY 2010
CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that Miss.RATHNASHEELAPATIL is Bonafide student of this
college with the Hall ticket no: 2008-1814, worked on the project work titled
“KRISHANA-GODAVARI BASIN” under the supervision of
MRS.RAJESHWARI project supervisor, Department of commerce, During the
year 2010.
Date: PRINCIPAL/HOD
4
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I sincerely feel the credit of the project could not be narrowed
down to one individual. The whole work is an outcome of the integrated efforts,
of all those concerned with it, through whose able co-operation and effective
guidance, I could not achieve its completion.
I also take this opportunity to thank our principal Prof. Zubeida Azeem and
a special word of thank to Dept Head (Prof) USHAKIRAN, and the entire staff of
DEPT. OF COMMERCE for their unconditional support, as regards facilities and
information crucial to the completion of my project work.
Last but not the least I would like to express my gratitude to OSMANIA
UNIVERSITY for introducing project work as a part of the B.COM curriculum.
RATHNASHEELAPATIL
5
TITLE PAGE
NAME OF THE TOPIC : A STUDY ON KRISHNA-
GODAVARI BASIN
KOTI, HYDERABAD.
6
INDEX
S.NO PARTICULARS
1 INTRODUCTION
2 PROFILE OF KG BASIN
3 DISCOVERY OF KG BASIN
7
CHAPTER-I
INTRODUCTION
8
CHAPTER-I
INTRODUCTION
Krishna-Godavari basin is a peri-cratonic passive margin basin in India. It is spread
across more than 50,000 square kilometers in the Krishna River and Godavari
River basins in Andhra Pradesh. The site is known for the D-6 block where
Reliance Industries discovered the biggest natural gas reserves in India in 2002. It
was also the world's largest gas discovery of 2002.At Matsyapuri; men in orange
overalls indulge in a different kind of fishing. At this particular location in Andhra
Pradesh, these men are scouting for hydrocarbons. About 16 km from Naraspur,
Matsyapuri is a part of the Krishna-Godavari basin (KG basin), one of the first
sites explored by the Oil and Natural Gas Commission (ONGC) of India. The basin
spans the coastal districts of East Godavari, West Godavari and Krishna in Andhra
Pradesh. It extends over 28000 sq km onshore, 24000 sq km in shallow waters and
18000 sq km in deep waters. The journey of exploration began in April 1977 when
ONGC began prospecting for oil and gas in the basin. In 1978, it drilled its first
well near Naraspur and discovered gas there. Since then, it has struck black gold
time and again in the rather lucrative basin. The Krishna Godavari basin dispute is
an ongoing dispute between Reliance Industries (RIL) and Reliance Natural
Resources (RNRL) over the pricing of natural gas found in the Krishna Godavari
basin. The dispute was widely covered by the media due to its acrimonious nature,
with the Supreme court of India comparing it to a 'fight between two
countries'[1]Around 7 trillion cubic feet of natural gas was discovered by Reliance
in the Krishna Godavari basin in October 2002.
9
It was a big step forward today for taking KG Basin gas to every kitchen, vehicle
both transport and Government and to every Small Scale industry in the State. To
let you know detailed information and importance of the natural gas, I have been
selected this “KG BASIN GAS” topic.
METHODOLOGY:
10
LIMITATIONS OF STUDY:
• On the basis of convenience the respondents are selected. Therefore the
sample size is small.
SCOPE OF STUDY:
• The Geographical Scope.
11
GEOGRAPHICAL
SCOPE OF KG
BASIN GAS
COMPENSATION TO RESOURCE BEARING
STATES RELATED TO PETROLEUM &
NATURAL GAS
Minerals constitute an important source of Revenue to the Resource
bearing state.
Under the existing provisions under M&M (DR) Act 1957, the revenue
derived on all minerals goes to state Government except in respect of Oil
& Natural Gas from the offshore areas.
12
taxes on royalties on the ground that the M&M (DR) Act 1957 is a
Central legislation.
Secondly, various public and private companies have been drilling and
extracting petroleum crude as well as natural gas in the Krishna-Godavari
basin-both onshore and offshore under New Exploration Licensing
Policy (NELP).
At present the State Governments are getting royalty only from on-shore
petroleum crude and natural gas.
While the royalty on onshore crude and gas production comes to State
Government, the proceeds of oil development cess is passed into Oil
Industries Development Board (OIDB) through budgetary mechanism of
Government of India.
While OIDB sanctions funds for both development of oil fields and oil
industry and also for development of infrastructure in the oil bearing
areas.
But, still no definite or precise share out of this income from cess is made
available to the state, which has to bear the burden of oil exploration and
development.
13
Similarly, the entire crude and other incomes derived from offshore
petroleum crude and natural gas are credited to Government of India
account.
Further, the state must be given right on royalty on offshore oil and
natural gas, depending on the proximity of the area to the nearby state.
Therefore suggested that at least 50% of the royalty and other levies
raised from offshore petroleum crude and natural gas also be made
available to the respective State Governments.
14
Oil production companies are getting huge profits on dispatch of oil &
natural gas but no profit is pass on to the resource state.
Certain portion of profits on Oil & Natural Gas shall be allowed to share
with the State Governments.
Profit sharing may be in terms of free Gas to the states from the production
sharing arrangements.
If necessary maximum profit sealing may be defined under the profit sharing
policy.
No portion of the Gas can go outside the state without first meeting
the entire requirement of the State and Local Areas.
GoI to consider and ensure that at least 50% of the gas produced of
the Coast of the State is allocated to the local power and other
fertilizer sectors.
15
NELP & Allotment of Exploration block to State Public Sector
Undertakings:
The Hon’ble Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh has already addressed
a letter to the Hon’ble Prime Minister to direct the Ministry of
Petroleum to reserve 50% of the NELP blocks for exclusive allocation
to the State PSU i.e., APMDC so that the State can also
simultaneously involve in oil exploration and meet their demands.
This fund can also be used to plan for future period when the Non-
renewable sources of energies like Oil & Gas will be exhausted for the
State (Like done in Alaska).
16
COMPENSATION TO AFFECTED PEOPLE:
It is better to offer good compensation to affected people
Phase-II: Once the production starts, the land owners after one year may
be compensated by way of paying additional amount equivalent to the
amount paid in the first phase.
SOCIAL INVOLVEMENT:
Since local people, do not get any benefit out of Exploitation of Oil
& Gas, the society at large must feel happy with the developers.
17
BENEFITS TO LOCAL BODIES:
Similarly, the local bodies must be benefited to the extent of loss
caused due to the affect of roads and also environment by way of
allowing the State Government to levy CESS on Royalty, which can
be apportioned to local bodies.
In order to involve the Oil & Gas Exploiting Agencies in local area
development, they must be made to run Mobile Health Clinics of High
Standard, supply of potable drinking water duly adopting certain
villages in coordination with local authorities.
18
KRISHNA-GODAVARI BASIN
REGULATION,
PRODUCTION & ROYALTY ON OIL & NATURAL GAS
OIL & NATURAL GAS REGULATION
19
The Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas (MOP&NG), GoI has been
regulating the allocation and pricing of gas produced by ONGC and
OIL by issuing administrative orders from time to time.
20
PRODUCTION ROYALTY COLLECTED IN
CRORES
YEAR OIL GAS OIL GAS TOTAL
(LAKH (IN
MT) MM3)
1999-2000 1.36 1333 9.11 25.11 34.22
2000-2001 2.62 1500 11.00 30.00 41.00
2001-2002 2.96 1731 23.96 33.56 57.52
2002-2003 2.81 1963 20.78 31.13 51.91
2003-2004 3.06 1867 48.67 36.93 85.60
2004-2005 2.13 1657 55.00 28.00 83.00
2005-2006 3.61 1625 63.43 41.75 105.18
2006-2007 2.14 1506 73.40 43.69 117.09
2007-2008 2.43 1536 90.89 39.54 130.43
The grant of leases for Oil and Natural Gas Rules 1959 framed under
Oil Fields Regulation and Development Act 1948.
1. kaikalur-3
2. Lingala
3. Mori-1
4. Mori-5
5. Tatipaka-PSP
6. Enugupalli
7. Razole 1&2
8. Elamanchalli
21
9. Adv-Ponnamanda
10. Endamuru
12. Mandapeta
13. Penumandam
14. Kesanapalli
15. Medapadu
16. Vadali
17. Nandigama
19. Lakshmaneswaram-1
20. kesavadasupalem-1
22. Suryaraopet
22
With the above background NELP was formulated by Government
in the year 1997-98
Hon’ble C.M. agreed to the said proposal and directed to identify Oil
Exploration Companies.
3. ENI, Italy
23
6. Gujarat State Petroleum Corp. Ltd (GSPCL)
24
APMDC addressed the Government of AP for amendments to objects
clause of memorandum of association of APMDC on 22.04.06,
permission of orders of Government are awaited.
25
Krishna- KG-ONN- 549 East
Godavari 2004/1 Godavari(AP)
And Yanam(UT)
Krishna- KG-ONN- 1140 West Godavari
Godavari 2004/2 and Krishna(AP)
Some private companies are working under the Joint Venture with
ONGC.
26
CHRONOLOGICAL SCOPE OF “KG BASIN GAS”
Following is the chronology of events surrounding the dispute over gas from the
Krishna-Godavari basin between the Anil Ambani group and his elder brother
Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries:
27
September-October 2005: Application filed with Bombay High Court for
scheme of de-merger. Shareholders approve scheme
December 2005: Court sanctions de-merger. Financial services, telecom and
power businesses transferred to Anil group. Mukesh keeps other businesses
Jan 10, 2006: RIL board approves the draft GSMA to be signed with
Reliance Natural Resources
Jan 12, 2006: The board of directors of Reliance Industries approves pact
that calls for 28 million units of gas to be supplied to Anil Ambani group
and up to 40 million units if the contract with NTPC does not materialize
February 2006: The board of Reliance Natural Resources reconstituted and
alleges deviations in the original agreement
February-July 2006: Reliance Natural seeks permission from oil ministry
to lay pipelines for transporting gas from Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh to
Dadri. Reliance Industries asks ministry to approve gas price at $2.34 per
unit based on bids called by NTPC. But permission denied
Nov 8, 2006: Reliance Natural takes the dispute to court. Later, company
wants Reliance Industries to be restrained from selling 28 million units of
gas to any third party. Also wants similar sanction for 12 million units if
NTPC contract does not materialise
May 3, 2007: Court allows Reliance Industries to sell gas in the interim,
subject to its final order
June 2007: Reliance Industries invites quotations from power and fertilizer
companies to facilitate the fixing the price of gas as per market conditions
June 9, 2007: Reliance Natural writes to oil ministry suggesting court order
prevented it from granting approval to the price as was being sought by
Reliance Industries
June 19, 2007: Reliance Natural seeks further restraining order against
Reliance Industries in respect of the balance of the 40 million units of gas
August 2007: Reliance Industries invites bids for price and quantity for sale
of KGD6 gas and asks oil ministry to approve sale at $4.32 per unit
September 2007: Ministerial panel approves gas price formula at $4.21 per
unit
October 2007: Government sets gas distribution priorities with first
preference to existing fertilizer, cooking gas, and steel units, as also new
power plants like the Dadri project
May 2008: Empowered group of ministers approves a gas utilization policy
Jan 30, 2009: Hearings conclude. Interim order passed allowing Reliance
Industries to execute sale to various customers for five years in accordance
with government policy
28
March 2009: Oil ministry finalizes gas allocation from KGD6 for fertilizer
and power companies
June 15, 2009: Division bench upholds the Ambani family gas agreement
and directs Reliance Industries and Reliance Natural to enter into a gas
supply pact within a month
June 19, 2009: Reliance Natural files caveat in apex court on gas price issue
after Bombay High Court order upholds its position on the gas price in its
dispute with Reliance Industries
June 23, 2009: Reliance Natural invites Reliance Industries for talks on high
court judgments, but Reliance Industries says it is studying the implication
July 1, 2009: Reliance Industries says it will appeal to the Supreme Court
against high court ruling. Says supplies to Reliance Industries not possible at
$2.34 per unit, as it is bound by government price of $4.20 per unit
July 3, 2009: Reliance Natural moves Supreme Court to make gas supply
from KGD6 binding on Reliance Industries
July 4, 2009: Reliance Industries moves apex court challenging high court
orders saying the verdict erred in deciding the three terms - quantity, tenure
and price of gas supply
July 5, 2009: Reliance Industries makes government a party in its petition
July 7, 2009: Apex court issues notice to Reliance Industries, Reliance
Natural Resources and the government on cross-appeals
July 17, 2009: Government asks court to make it a respondent
July 18, 2009: The government files a petition wanting Ambani family pact
that deals with gas supplies to be declared null and void
July 19, 2009: Government says gas is its property July 20, 2009: Supreme
Court calls for counter-replies and fixes Sep 1 as date of hearing
July 22, 2009: Prime Minister’s Office wants oil ministry to explain why it
has been accused by Anil Ambani group of siding with Reliance Industries
over gas dispute
July 28-Aug 3, 2009: Anil Ambani lashes out at oil ministry for allegedly
favouring his elder brother. Matter also rocks parliament, where Samajwadi
Party leader Mulayam Singh Yadav demands resignation of Petroleum
Minister Murli Deora. But Deora says gas does not belong to either Mukesh
or Ambani, but the government.
Aug 4, 2009: Oil regulator rejects Anil Ambani group’s charges of acts of
omission and commission in allowing capital expenditure of KGD6 gas to
be hiked from $2.4 billion to $8.8 billion.
Aug 28, 2009: Reliance Industries says NTPC was told gas price of $2.34
was subject to government approval. Apex court lists hearing for Oct 20
29
Sep 14, 2009: Reliance Natural accuses Reliance Industries of charging
illegal marketing margins
Sep 15, 2009: Anil Ambani Group asks apex Court to make NTPC a party
to dispute
Sep 24, 2009: NTPC signs pact with Reliance Industries to buy a part of
natural gas, other than the quantity under dispute, at $4.20 per unit.
Oct 5, 2009: Reliance Industries says chairman Mukesh had signed pact on
natural gas with Anil Ambani Group in personal capacity without approval
from other board members
Oct 9, 2009: Anil Ambani threatens to sue oil regulator saying he made
false allegations against his group
Oct 11, 2009: Anil Ambani says two brothers can still sit across the table
and resolve matters amicably, but Reliance Industries says only court can
settle matters now
30
31
CHAPTER-II
PROFILE OF KG BASIN
ABOUT KG BASIN
The Krishna-Godavari basin has been a potential zone for extraction of oil and gas
for a long time. The ONGC started exploration for oil and gas in the KG Basin in
April 1977, and drilled its first well near Narasapuram in 1978, and discovered gas.
As part of exploration for oil and gas, the ONGC has drilled 622 wells, including
483 on land, and 136 offshore. At present 55 oil wells including 34 on land, 21
offshore and 176 gas wells, including 151 on land, and 25 offshore are in operation
in the KG basin.
Its onshore oil production witnessed a gradual change over the period, from 0.207
million metric tonnes in 2005-06, to 0.284 million metric tonnes in 2008-09.
ONGC has set up a mini-refinery at Tatipaka to distil crude oil into naphtha, high-
speed diesel, superior kerosene oil and low sulphur high stock. It has rigs at
Penikilpadu, South Mahadevapatnam, Kalla, Kesudaspalem, Malapuram and at
32
Vadali. Its installations are set up in an approximately 72 sq km spread in the KG
basin. Currently, the ONGC produces 840 tonnes of oil and 44 lakh cubic metres
of gas daily.
RIL started its production of crude oil at the KG-D6 block of the KG basin in 2008
with a production of 5,000 barrels a day. They are targetting peak hydrocarbon
production of 5, 50,000 barrels in a few years. The block is located in the Bay of
Bengal, 50 km off the Kakinada coast, at a depth of 8,000 ft.
The basic interest of Andhra Pradesh should be to ensure that adequate gas
required in the state is made available at reasonable rates. This therefore means
that no portion of the gas from the K-G Basin can go outside the state without first
meeting the entire requirements of the state, namely, power generation, CNG,
Domestic, Gas and Industrial.
As things stand today, in the near future, there will be only four producers of
Natural Gas in K-G Basin.
These are
The natural gas available from K-G Basin is essentially a methane-rich gas and can
be used for power generation, as substitute for LPG for domestic gas supply, as
substitute for diesel and petrol in the form of CNG for automobiles and as feed-
stock for manufacture of urea.
33
Andhra Pradesh needs the natural gas for all these purposes and it is estimated that
the gas requirement in our state will be around 83.27 million cu.m per day by the
year 2010.
The real demand for natural gas however depends on its pricing, coverage and
reach of the pipeline network to all parts of the State.
While natural gas is not a perfect substitute for crude oil, it is turning out to be an
immensely important and clean energy source for all sorts of industries. Reliance
started pumping out gas from its D6 field almost exactly a year ago, dramatically
increasing the availability of gas from domestic sources.
Of course, the KG basin story has not been without its share of controversy.
34
Currently, Reliance Industries is embroiled in a bitter gas pricing dispute with
Reliance Natural Resources, owned by Anil Ambani. That dispute has reached
India’s apex court, which is expected to pronounce judgement on it anytime now.
Whatever the final outcome of that dispute, it is impossible not to be awed by the
sheer scope of the KG Basin gas projects — from the deep sea engineering
challenges that needed to be surmounted before the gas could be mined, to the way
it will change the country’s energy landscape. A few weeks before the first
anniversary of Reliance’s KG basin gas production, a BW team travelled to the
offshore platform in KG basin.
35
Constitution of India, all petroleum reserves, including gas reserves in their
natural state in the territorial waters or the continental shelf or the exclusive
economic zone of India vest in the Union of India and are held for the
purposes of the Union. The government is therefore the sovereign owner of
KG basin gas for distribution of gas for public good viz fertilizer production,
power generation, transport, industry, domestic use etc. That being the case,
why does the government of India – after 59 years of the adoption of our
Constitution – need to reasserts its ownership of KG gas today in July 2009?
Has its sovereign ownership been challenged by any foreign country? No. In
an affidavit filed in the Supreme Court on July 18, 2009, the sovereign
Bharat sarkar pleads that by a privately negotiated settlement vide an MoU
dated June 18, 2005 between CMD, Reliance Industries Limited (RIL) and
CMD, Reliance Natural Resources Limited (RNRL), KG basin gas, whose
ownership vests with Union of India, has been used as private property.
Bharat sarkar now pleads the court to annul the MoU.
Before economic reforms were initiated in the early nineties, ONGC and Oil
India Ltd were the only gas exploration and production companies, owned
by the government of India. The distribution and marketing of gas was being
carried out by the Gas Authority of India Ltd (GAIL), another PSU formed
in 1984 with the specific task of forming a national gas grid for gas
distribution in the country to ensure regional balance. As a part of reform
process, the government decided to invite private investment for exploration
and production of oil and gas. New Exploration and Licensing Policy
(NELP) was notified in 1999 to award oil/gas blocks to private companies as
contractors. In this process a Production Sharing Contract (PSC) was
executed in April 2000 between the government of India and undivided RIL
and its minor (10 per cent) partner NIKO Resources Limited for production
of gas in an area of 339.41 square kilometer in KG basin (D6 field). After
the dispute between the two siblings, Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) was
demerged into two companies viz RIL and Reliance Natural Resources Ltd
(RNRL), which went to the younger sibling. The MoU of June 2005, which
the government of India is now asking to be nullified, stipulated that the gas
produced from KG basin as per PSC will be utilized as follows:
Quantity of 12 million metric standard cubic metres of gas per day
36
(mmscmd) will be given to NTPC.The next 28 mmscmd would go to RNRL.
The rest will be supplied in 60:40 ratio with 60 per cent to RIL and 40 per
cent to RNRL.The pricing of the gas was stipulated at 2.34 dollar/mmbtu
(million British thermal unit)
The above MoU inter alia ignored the sovereign ownership of the
government over KG gas on two major parameters viz allocation of gas and
the pricing of the same. The government now admits in its Special Leave
Petition (SLP) before the Supreme Court in its affidavit in July 2009 that
rights of Union of India have been infringed for the following reasons:
That RIL and RNRL cannot settle between themselves as to how the gas,
which is a national asset and a natural resource that vests in the government
of India and which is to be utilized for the wider and larger interest of the
nation, is to be distributed. It is not the private property of RIL and RNRL
and any understanding arrived at between them is not binding upon the
government of India.
Study on KG Basin:
A Central committee has asked the Environment Ministry to take into
consideration likely threat of land subsidence in Krishna-Godavari Basin in
Andhra Pradesh while giving clearance to any underground oil or gas exploration
project in future.
Though it said it did not find any direct evidence to indicate any land subsidence in
the gas field or the adjoining areas in the KG Basin, there is a need to conduct an
extensive study by institutes like Indian School of Mines on present state and
likelihood of such a situation in the region.
37
The court was hearing a petition filed by the Krishna Godavari Delta Parirakshana
Samiti represented by Vijay Bangar Raju and Krishna Rao from West Godavari
raising apprehensions that land is sinking due to the over-exploitation of oil and
gas in Konaseema region. They had sought the government's intervention in the
matter.
The team visited the KG basin, nearby villages as well sites of Oil and Natural Gas
Corporation (ONGC) and Reliance Industries Limited, which along with others,
are conducting exploration in both offshore and onshore facilities.
In its report submitted to the ministry, the team said that land subsidence was
reported and observed in the areas with extensive extraction of underground water,
oil and gas or mining in various parts of the world, including India (coal mines).
The team also favoured a study to find out the reasons of underground water
getting saline in certain locations.
KG Basin Gas:
HYDERABAD: While expressing satisfaction that the entire present requirement
of Andhra Pradesh is being met from the KG basin gas, the Chief Minister said that
the priority of the State Government is to see that piped gas reaches every kitchen
in Hyderabad and other Municipalities in the first Phase in the State. A meeting of
38
the concerned companies will be held at the earliest to see that an MoU is signed in
this regard. The details will be worked out about the cost of infrastructure to be
created for piped gas supply in the city and other Municipalities.
The Chief Minister expressed hope that once the infrastructure is created and
pipelines laid for gas in the city and CNG stations established, vehicles and small
and medium industries can also be supplied the gas at a very reasonable price. This
will not only reduce the prices of gas by 40% and also pollution in the city. The
Chief Minister also saw a presentation on Indian gas market--current consumption
and supply. The RIL is presently supplying 10 million metric standard cubic metre
per day (mmscmd) for projects in Andhra Pradesh which is the present
requirement.
The Chief Minister also reiterated that the State will fight for its reasonable share
of gas to be produced in future and also for its share of royalties. He said the he
will make sure that the State also will gets the remaining 2.21 mmscmd duly
allotted to it.
The Chief Minister was informed that as per Article 297 of the Constitution of
India, all lands, minerals and other things of value underlying the ocean within the
territorial waters or the continental shelf of India vest in the Union Government. In
view of this, the natural gas occurring in K-G Basin in the Bay of Bengal, off the
coast of Andhra Pradesh belongs to Government of India. This is the case with
Bombay High, North Basin and South Basin gas as well which is presently
meeting 70% of India’s gas requirement through HBJ pipeline, now extended up to
New Delhi.
The Government of India, with a view to utilizing the said resource, has come up
with New Exploration Licensing Policy (NELP), whereby the exploration and
exploitation of the natural gas have been thrown open to the private corporate
sector also. As part of this, through an International Competitive Bidding process,
Reliance Industries Limited (RIL), ONGC, Cairns Energy and Gujarat State
Petrochemical Corporation were awarded various blocks in K-G Basin. Of the
above four contractors, only RIL has recently commercialized the natural gas. The
RIL was initially contending that they have the right to sell the gas to any customer
on the market discovered price.
The natural gas in KG basin is capable of substituting Naphtha for the production
of Urea; it is capable of power generation; it is capable of substituting petrol and
diesel as CNG; it is capable of substituting LPG for domestic gas and it is also
39
capable of substituting furnace oil for industrial use. Thus, it has a wide range of
applications and only an impartial prioritization of gas allocation on some rational
basis by an independent agency like the Government of India can serve long term
national interest of the people of the Country.
In view of the above, the Government of India have constituted Empowered Group
of Ministers (EGOM) for prioritization of gas allocation and fixing the price of
natural gas under the Chairmanship of the then Union Minister for External
Affairs, Pranab Mukherjee. The other Members are the Union Ministers for
Petroleum, Power, Fertilisers, Finance, Law, Justice & Company Affairs and
Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission of India.
The EGoM on natural gas at their meeting held on 28th May 08 decided that the
first supplies of natural gas from the KG Basin should go to meeting the
requirements of natural gas of existing stranded power and fertilizer projects and
balance, if any, should be allocated to City gas distribution and new power and
fertilizer projects. The EGoM on Natural gas, at their meeting held on 28th May
2008 made the following prioritization of gas allocation from RIL’s D6 Block in
KG Basin out of their proposed first phase production of 40 mmscmd of gas: 14
mmscmd to existing fertilizer units, 18 mmscmd to existing power Projects, 3
mmscmd to LPG Extraction Plants and 5 mmscmd to CGD projects.
The EGOM further decided that the price of the natural gas shall be $ 4.3 per
million BTU for all classes of consumers. Thus, it is the Government of India that
has decided both the prioritization of gas supply and the price, reducing the role of
RIL only for production and supply of gas. As a result, the RIL does not have any
say either in allocation or in price fixation. Interestingly, no portion of the gas that
is presently being produced is utilized by RIL.
The RIL has started supplying gas from the first week of April, 2009 beginning
with 5 mmscmd. As on 1st August, 2009, their production has reached
31mmscmd. Out of this, the RIL is supplying 10 mmscmd of gas to projects in
Andhra Pradesh, 5 mmscmd of gas to projects in Maharashtra, 7 mmscmd for
projects on the HBJ pipeline and 8 mmscmd for projects in Gujarat. Incidentally,
the entire requirement in respect of all the existing gas based projects in the State is
fully met by supplies from RIL. It is estimated that RIL will reach the targeted
production level of 40 mmscmd by 30th September, 2009. The RIL will eventually
produce 80 mmscmd by September, 2010. No body is quite sure as to when other
contractors like ONGC, CAIRNS and GSPC will start production from the wells
allocated to them. It may take atleast four years from now for commercialization.
40
In Andhra Pradesh, gas-based power projects for a capacity of 2799 MW were
promoted on the assurance of gas supply given by ONGC/GAIL during the period
1994-2003. Nagarjuna Fertilizers & Chemicals Limited has also come up on the
basis of similar gas assurance. The total requirement of gas in the State in respect
of the existing projects is 16 mmscmd, as against which, GAIL was supplying only
6 mmscmd, leaving a gap of 10 mmscmd. As a result, the power projects were
operating at 30% PLF only and Nagarjuna was operating at only 60% capacity
utilization. The EGOM allotted 7.79 mmscmd of gas from RIL’s first phase
production as against a requirement of 10 mmscmd. As there is a provision for
utilizing the unutilized portion of the gas allocated, the RIL is supplying the entire
requirement of 10 mmscmd in the State in respect of our existing power and
fertilizer projects. Because of this, the power situation in the State has vastly
improved, as all the gas-based power projects are operating at their full capacity
for the first time since their implementation.
The APGENCO has already initiated steps for promotion of 2100 MW of gas-
based power project in Karimnagar district. This approximately requires 8.5
mmscmd of gas, for which the RIL has already issued a firm gas supply letter in
2007. In view of the changed circumstances, this however needs the approval of
EGoM. The APGENCO is following up this matter. The EGOM will soon start
allocation of gas for new projects after ensuring that the requirements of all the
existing gas based projects are fully met.
41
EXPLORATION FOCUS:
42
Survey area :
India's deepwater Krishna-Godavari basin is emerging as one the world's hottest oil
and gas exploration areas. The basin's huge potential is demonstrated by Reliance
Industries' 19 discoveries since 2000. The Indian government's New Exploration
Licence Policy (NELP) has liberalised India's upstream industry, and is
successfully attracting foreign and private investment. NELP Round VII, launched
in December 2007, has three shallow water and three deepwater blocks on off er in
the Krishna-Godavari basin. EMGS has recently acquired an electromagnetic
(EM) scanning survey of one of the deepwater blocks, KG-DWN-2005/3, and data
from this survey are now available.
43
CHAPTER-III
DISCOVERY OF KG BASIN
44
DISCOVERY:
Krishna-Godavari (KG) Basin, on the east coast of India (Figure 1),
encompasses a sedimentary cover of approximately 100,000 km2 both
onshore and offshore. The basin has emerged as a frontier area due to the
discovery of a multitrillion cubic feet super giant gas field (Bastia et al.,
2004).
Figure-1
45
coastal districts of East Godavari, West Godavari and Krishna in Andhra Pradesh.
It extends over 28000 sq km onshore, 24000 sq km in shallow waters and 18000 sq
km in deep waters.The journey of exploration began in April 1977 when ONGC
began prospecting for oil and gas in the basin. In 1978, it drilled its first well near
Naraspur and discovered gas there. Since then, it has struck black gold time and
again in the rather lucrative basin.The Krishna Godavari basin dispute is an
ongoing dispute between Reliance Industries (RIL) and Reliance Natural
Resources (RNRL) over the pricing of natural gas found in the Krishna Godavari
basin. The dispute was widely covered by the media due to its acrimonious nature,
with the Supreme court of India comparing it to a 'fight between two
countries'[1]Around 7 trillion cubic feet of natural gas was discovered by Reliance
in the Krishna Godavari basin in October 2002. In 2005 the Reliance Group was
split between Anil Ambani and Mukesh Ambani with RIL going to Mukesh
Ambani and RNRL to Anil Ambani . A family pact was made in 2005 in
which RIL was to supply 28 million cubic meters of gas a day at $2.34 per
million units to RNRL for 17 years. However, in September 2007, the Indian
Government fixed a price of $ 4.2/mBtu. This decision was later reversed by
the Bombay High Court, which ordered RIL to supply the gas as per the
original agreement.
Reliance Industries created history when natural gas from its deep-sea Krishna
Godavari basin fields flowed to surface , a fleet achieved in flat seven years that
will transform India's energy landscape.
"Natural gas production from wells started at 1700 hrs and it reached the onland
receiving facility at Gadimoga in Kakinada district of Andhra Pradesh,"
a source, in know of the development, said.
It took 13-14 hours for the gas to travel from the sea-bed to the onshore facility.
"The flare (at Gadimoga) lit up at 0920 hours," the source said.
A company spokesperson confirmed start of gas production, but did not give
details. "We will be issuing a statement shortly," .
46
The gas find is reported to be at a depth of 2.45 km in the G-1 location of the
basin. Reports indicate the existence of 4 trillion cubic feet of reserves at the site.
The discovery has also led one to believe the existence of more gas-bearing
structures in the field. ONGC has 12 blocks in the region, and the total gas
discoveries could be around 8 trillion cubic feet.
Reliance Industries, it may be recalled, had made a gas discovery of 7-10 trillion
cubic feet in the same basin, during November 2002.
Reliance in KG Basin:
In September 2007, India's largest private sector company, Reliance Industries
Limited (RIL) announced an oil discovery in the deepwater block KG-DWN-98/1
(KG-D4) located in the Krishna-Godavari basin (KG basin). This block was
awarded to RIL, which holds 100% participating interest in it, under NELP-I and
spans an area of 8100 sq kms.
There is no doubt about the fact that the Krishna-Godavari basin (KG basin) is
hydrocarbon-fertile. Since only about 1/3rd of the total potential for exploration
wells has been drilled so far, the basin certainly holds far more gas in its womb
than has been discovered so far.
In September 2009, the Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH) said that the
gas output from only the fields managed Reliance Industries Ltd. (RIL) could be
almost 4 times the levels committed by the company so far.
Currently, RIL has committed 80 million metric standard cubic metres per day
(mmscmd) and its current production level is about 36 mmscmd. Hence, if the
DGH's calculations are accurate, RIL's output would be about 300 mmscmd ?
almost quadruple!
The mammoth implication of these figures lies in its oil equivalence. Totaling
about 2 million barrels of oil per day, it wholly covers India's current consumption
of oil. Ironically, most of this oil is imported by the country. However, the nation's
gas consumption is over and above this expected output.
Yet, if both DGH and RIL confirm this production potential, it would mark the
most significant energy development India has ever seen!
47
In September 2007, India's largest private sector company, Reliance Industries
Limited (RIL) announced an oil discovery in the deepwater block KG-DWN-98/1
(KG-D4) located in the Krishna-Godavari basin (KG basin). This block was
awarded to RIL, which holds 100% participating interest in it, under NELP-I and
spans an area of 8100 sq kms.
The find, named 'Dhirubhai ? 36', was the premier oil discovery in the deep-water
basin of the area. The well was located in a water depth of 565 meters and was
drilled to a target depth of 3595 meters. During the Drill Stem Testing (DST), the
well flowed 596 barrels of oil per day.
The famous KG-DWN-98/l (KG-D6) block, where RIL, Reliance Group made the
world's largest gas discovery in 2005, spans 8,100 sq. kms. of the Krishna-
Godavari basin (KG basin). It lies in the Bay of Bengal on India's east coast.
In March 2003, the exploration team discovered Dhirubhai-4, with in-place gas
volumes of 1,700 bn standard cubic feet.
In February 2006, RIL encountered the thickest hydrocarbon column so far in its
MA-2 well. This column reached a depth of about 3.6 km and penetrated a gross
hydrocarbon column of 194m consisting of 170 m of gas and 24 m of oil.
Initial rate of production from the MA field is about 5,000 barrels per day (bpd)
and is expected to reach its peak rate of 40,000 bpd by about mid-2010. D1 and D3
are expected to reach 2.8 bcfd within the first year of operation, although there is
flexibility to raise this to 4.2bcfd.
Several facts and details about the KG-D6 project of the Reliance Group under the
head of an amalgamated Reliance Industries Limited and Reliance Petroleum
Limited; which is the root cause of the RIL RNRL gas dispute, currently being
battled in the courts.
48
KG Basin: RIL’s Discoveries:
The famous KG-DWN-98/l (KG-D6) block, where Reliance Industries Ltd. (RIL)
made the world’s largest gas discovery in 2005, spans 8,100 sq. kms. of the
Krishna-Godavari basin (KG basin). It lies in the Bay of Bengal on India’s east
coast.
In March 2003, the exploration team discovered Dhirubhai-4, with in-place gas
volumes of 1,700 bn standard cubic feet.
49
In February 2006, RIL encountered the thickest hydrocarbon column so far in its
MA-2 well. This column reached a depth of about 3.6 km and penetrated a gross
hydrocarbon column of 194m consisting of 170 m of gas and 24 m of oil.
Initial rate of production from the MA field is about 5,000 barrels per day (bpd)
and is expected to reach its peak rate of 40,000 bpd by about mid-2010. D1 and D3
are expected to reach 2.8 bcfd within the first year of operation, although there is
flexibility to raise this to 4.2bcfd.
During the annual general meeting of RNRL on 29 July 2009, Anil Ambani
accused the petroleum ministry of siding with RIL and accused RIL of inflating the
capital expenditures and being greedy to earn supernatural profits[6]30 MPs of Left
Front asked the government to take over the distribution and marketing of gas from
the basin. They also urged the government to reduce the gas price to $2.34/mmbtu..
On 8 August, RIL president Atul Chandra issued a statement which rejected the
allegations of Anil Ambani as baseless, tendentious and motivated. Following this,
ADAG started publishing advertisements in national media criticizing Reliance
and the Petroleum Ministry and claiming that the government will receive only Rs
500 crore from the project. On 21 August, Government of India described the
campaign by Anil Ambani as unfortunate and claimed that it is expected to earn Rs
84,000 crore from the project.]
50
(NSE: RELIANCE) is India's largest private sector conglomerate (by market
value) , with an annual turnover of US$ 35.9 billion and profit of US$ 4.85 billion
for the fiscal year ending in March 2008 making it one of India's private sector
Fortune Global 500 companies, being ranked at 206th position (2008). It was
founded by the Indian industrialist Dhirubhai Ambani in 1966. Ambani has been a
pioneer in introducing financial instruments like fully convertible debentures to the
Indian stock markets. Ambani was one of the first entrepreneurs to draw retail
investors to the stock markets. Critics allege that the rise of Reliance Industries to
the top slot in terms of market capitalization is largely due to Dhirubhai's ability to
manipulate the levers of a controlled economy to his advantage. Though the
company's oil-related operations form the core of its business, it has diversified its
operations in recent years. After severe differences between the founder's two sons,
Mukesh Ambani and Anil Ambani, the group was divided between them in 2006.
In September 2008, Reliance Industries was the only Indian firm featured in the
Forbes's list of "world's 100 most respected companies"
51
Products:
Reliance Industries Limited has a wide range of products from petroleum
products, petrochemicals, to garments (under the brand name of Vimal),
Reliance Retail has entered into the fresh foods market as Reliance Fresh
and launched a new chain called Delight Reliance Retail and NOVA
Chemicals have signed a letter of intent to make energy-efficient structures.
The primary business of the company is petroleum refining and
petrochemicals. It operates a 33 million tonne refinery at Jamnagar in the
Indian state of Gujarat. Reliance has also completed a second refinery of 29
million tons at the same site which started operations in December 2008. The
company is also involved in oil & gas exploration and production. In 2002, it
struck a major find on India's eastern coast in the Krishna Godavari basin.
Gas production from this find was started on April 2, 2009. As of the end of
3rd quarter of 2009-2010, gas production from the KG D6 ramped up to 60
MMSCMD.
The gas reserve is 7 trillion cubic feet in size. Equivalent to 1.2 billion barrels (165
million tonnes) of crude oil, but only 5 trillion cubic feet are extractable.
52
RIL gas flows from KG-D6; India to save $9 bn in oil import:
Reliance Industries began gas production from Wednesday, and the output is at 2.5
million cubic metres per day
New Delhi: Billionaire Mukesh Ambani-run Reliance Industries has begun natural
gas production from its deep-sea Krishna Godavari basin fields, a history-making
feat that will help India save $9 billion in oil imports a year.
RIL took just six-and-half years from discovery to begin gas production from the
deep-sea KG-D6 block as against the global practice of 9-10 years, the firm said in
a statement.
Dhirubhai-1 and 3, the first two of the 18 gas finds in KG-D6 that have been put to
production, will transform the energy landscape by boosting power supply from
idle generators starved of fuel and produce cheaper urea for agriculture.
“Natural gas production from wells started and reached the onland receiving
facility at Gadimoga near Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh in 2 days. This source in
the know of the development said.
It took 13-14 hours for the gas to travel from the sea bed to the onshore facility.
The 15 million cubic metres per day of KG-D6 gas allocation to urea-making
plants will help save the country about Rs3,000 crore per annum in fertiliser
subsidy. Another 18 mmcmd of gas will go to power plants, with one mmcmd
capable of producing 250 megawatt of electricity.
The company said gas from offshore is being received at its world-class onshore
facility at Gadimoga, a small village in the East Godavari district, and delivered to
the East West pipeline of Reliance Gas Transportation Infrastructure Ltd.
“Reliance has created history and has once again demonstrated its ability to
implement complex projects at par with the best performance benchmarks in the
world,” company Chairman and Managing Director Mukesh Ambani said.
The clean energy from the Dhirubhai 1 and 3 discoveries of the KG-D6 block will
be a boost for energy security and growth of India,
53
The gas would boost power supply from idle electricity generators starved of fuel
and produce cheaper urea for agriculture.
It is a landmark in the history of oil and gas production. (The) world over, this has
created a new benchmark for deep-sea developers,.
The $8.835-billion (Rs44,175 crore) project will double domestic natural gas
production when the field hits its peak output of 80 million cubic metres per day in
2010.
It will wipe out the fuel deficit at urea-making fertiliser plants and meet half of the
36 mmcmd gas shortfall in power plants. Reliance will produce enough gas to meet
about a third of the UK demand.
The gas output will start at 10 mmcmd and rise by the same volume every month
to reach 40 mmcmd by July-end.
54
Reliance Natural Resource Limited:
Indian energy major Reliance Industries has found natural gas in four more areas in
its field off the country's east coast, two sources with knowledge of the matter said
on Friday.
The company, India's largest listed firm with interests including oil and gas
exploration, refining, petrochemicals and retail, has informed the Directorate
General of Hydrocarbons about the discoveries in the Krishna Godavari (KG)
basin, the sources said.
Reliance is unable to hit peak gas production at its D6 block in the KG basin due to
customers not buying allocated volumes and a lack of pipeline infrastructure,
Executive Director P.M.S. Prasad said on Tuesday.
55
The company is producing 63-64 million standard cubic metres a day (mmscmd)
of gas from the block, he said. Gas output was slated to reach a peak of 80
mmscmd by April.
Details about potential reserves in the new finds were not immediately available.
In April last year, Reliance started pumping gas from its find in the KG basin. The
find, India's largest, is expected to almost double the energy-hungry nation's output
when production peaks to 80 mmscmd.
Reliance shares closed up 1.8 percent on Friday, while the Mumbai market rose 1.2
percent.
Discussing the situation with Projectmonitor, a senior GSPL official said that gas
from the KG basin will be transported up to Bhadbhut in Bharuch by the 1,440-km
East-West pipeline of Reliance Gas Transportation Infrastructure Ltd, a subsidiary
56
of Mukesh Ambani-controlled Reliance Industries Ltd. From there, gas supplies
will be managed by GSPL's Gujarat gas grid. Reliance's East-West pipeline, it is
reliably learnt, was test-fired recently.
India's longest, the 48-in diameter East-West pipeline originates at Oduru near
Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh, which is the site of the KG basin gas discovery, and
reaches Gujarat traversing Maharashtra. It will be also be hooked up to Gas
(India)'s national gas grid in each of the three states. The East-West pipeline would
be connected with Hazira-Vijaipur-Jagdishpur and Dahej-Vijaipur pipeline
network at Ankot in Gujarat, Dahej-Uran and Dabhol-Panel pipeline network at
Mashkal in Maharashtra and Krishna Godavari basin pipeline network at oduru in
AndhraPradesh.
GSPL's Bharuch-Jamnagar pipeline has significantly boosted the Gujarat gas grid
network. Gujarat has planned to set up a state gas grid network of 2,200 km, out of
which around 1,400 km is now operational, the GSPC official said. Among the
several pipelines under construction within Gujarat is the 190-km pipeline that
would transport gas from Bhadbhut in Bharuch (the Gujarat extremity of Reliance's
East-West pipeline) to Gana (Anand district), passing through Hadala (in Surendra
Nagar district).
Reliance Industries very recently started commercial gas production from its D-6
block in the KG basin (see back page). Initial production will be 15 mmscmd,
reaching 40 mmscmd on stabilisation. Peak production is expected to be 80
mmscmd. Last month, pacts were signed for priority gas supplies to urea units.
Significant discoveries:
Gujarat State Petroleum Corporation Ltd has also made significant discoveries—
including its biggest, Deen Dayal—in the KG basin. By 2011, some 8-10 mmscmd
of gas is expected to start flowing on commercial scale, thanks to a $1-billion
investment programme currently underway. GSPCL officials said that various
57
onshore facilities are currently under construction. For the gas transportation and
distribution network within Andhra Pradesh, the GSPC group has formed a new
company, Krishna Godavari Gas Network Ltd, in joint venture with Infrastructure
Corporation of Andhra Pradesh and IDFC Private Equity. Gas will also be brought
to Gujarat through Reliance East-West pipeline in which GSPC has taken up
capacity.
58
CHAPTER-IV
GOVT INFLUENCE
59
Gas from K-G basin: YSR seeks priority status for State:
Apprises Prime Minister of the Government’s efforts to reduce pollution levels
Reiterating his Government’s commitment to bring down the price of domestic gas
cylinder to Rs. 200, Chief Minister Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy has requested Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh to give priority to Andhra Pradesh in the allocation of
gas from the Krishna-Godavari basin.
The Government had drawn up plans to develop the twin cities to international
standards involving an estimated Rs. 20,000 crore and it was proposed to set up
1,000 CNG filling stations in this direction.
Recalls letters
He asserted that the Centre should decide the allocation and pricing issues related
to K-G basin gas without allowing the decision to fall into the hands of the private
sector. Recalling the letters he had addressed to the Centre, he said giving due
priority to the State would enable setting up pipeline for supply of gas and bringing
down the prices of domestic gas significantly, fulfilling the assurance given to
women.
The Government had set up a joint venture firm, Krishna-Godavari Gas Network
Limited, and was preparing plans to utilise the existing trunk line between K-G-
basin and Hyderabad under the public-private partnership mode.
Government lauded
When the Chief Minister explained about the plans to develop Visakhapatnam
which won acclaim as the “destination city’ and other major infrastructure projects,
60
the Prime Minister wanted the Government to send a detailed report on the projects
in the pipeline to the Planning Commission so that the Centre could positively
consider them.
YSR was initally adamant that natural gas from the Krishan-Godavari (KG) basin
operated by Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries Ltd., (RIL), be first
distributed in Andhra Pradesh. In fact, YSR had written to the Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh to provide at least 10 per cent of the KG basin gas to Andhra
Pradesh, being the first landfall point for KG gas and at a preferential price.
However, he later conceeded to the fact that distribution of gas is under the
preview of the Empowered Group of Ministers (EGoM) formed under the aegis of
Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas to determine the pricing and supply of gas
from the eastcoast offshore KG-D6 block.
He also stressed that gas will be allotted to States by the Centre and can't be
decided by the 'Ambani brothers'.
"The dispute over sharing of gas is not an issue to be settled by their mother
(Kokilaben). It is for the Centre to decide who should get the gas and at what
price," YSR told reporters in July, 2009.
Reddy, not only publicly demanded that Andhra Pradesh, be given a due share of
the gas deposits but also set up Andhra Pradesh Gas Infrastructure Corporation to
bid for the NELP blocks and foray into gas exploration.
Sources said RIL wasn't keen on supplying all the produce to Andhra Pradesh,
particularly, to government-run organisations, as they would put tremendous
pressure on reducing the tariffs.
The Chairman, wanted the State Government agencies to identify the geographical
area around cities in the State which is economically viable to take and distribute
the gas. For this purpose, he wanted the State Government to constitute a
61
committee for identification of the economically viable areas. The Committee
would include the Investment & Infrastructure dept., industries, Municipal
Administration etc.This committee will get the top consultants to study these
economically viable areas and also ensure that this is taken up on mission mode.
The I&I Department will also hold a seminar to promote and motivate the
entrepreneurs in which the PNGRB Chairman will also participate within a month.
The Chief Minister told the officials that he will review the progress of the work
every month. He said that we should on the forefront and the first to take the KG
basin Gas to every kitchen, vehicles as well as Small Scale industries in the State.
The Chief Minister, in principle, agreed to reduce the VAT on Natural Gas sales
from the present 12% to 4% on the advise of the PNGRB Chairman so that the
people of the state will get the gas at a very reasonable price. Dr.Reddy said we
should be proactive to see that the KG basin gas distribution is taken up by the
entrepreneurs. The bidding should begin at the earliest and in five years the KG
basin gas should reach every house in the State.
on behalf of Reliance”
62
NEW DELHI: The Communist Party of India demanded Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh to clarify the action taken to deal with the “mess” created by the
government regarding Krishna-Godavari basin gas, its supply and determination of
price of gas and “abnormal” gas concessions to Reliance Industries Limited.
“The Government of India, its Petroleum Ministry, and other Cabinet Ministers
should be accountable to the people of India, not to any corporation, however big it
is. Hence, the CPI demands clarification from the government on all the issues
raised by the public and the media,” the CPI Central Secretariat said in a press
release.
It said the statement by Petroleum Minister Murli Deora avoided answering the
main questions raised by the people and media and sought response on four issues,
including that there was a gap regarding the quantum of gas produced at the KG
basin, since the estimates by the Directorate-General of Hydrocarbons, and the
statement of the Minister differ. It sought to know how much gas was produced
since February till date and whether Reliance slowed down its exploration to wait
for immediate usage.
Reliance, the CPI statement said, had, in an international competitive bid, agreed to
supply gas at $2.34 a unit which it was not ready to honour and the NTPC
(National Thermal Power Corporation) was fighting to getting it implemented.
In November 2004, the capital cost of KG D6 project was around Rs.5,400 crore
and by the end of 2007, it escalated to Rs.67,000 crore. This, it said, was entirely
recoverable from gas sales to three times the capital expenditure, that is,
Rs.2,01,000 crore, and any cash share for the government would be paid only after
recovery of this entire amount.
63
It said there was an allegation that two junior officers who were not authorised had
agreed to the cost escalation causing a loss of thousands of crore of rupees to the
country.
The move deprived profit to the Reliance shareholders against estimated annual
earnings of Rs.5,000 crore by the RGTIL.
The party also said that the newly introduced Section 35 AD in the Income Tax
Act allowed cent per cent capital expenditure incurred on the setting up and
operating of natural gas or crude oil pipeline network as 100 per cent tax deduction
in the first year. “As a result, it is alleged that Mr. Mukesh Ambani gets Rs. 20,000
crore,” the release said.
The Gujarat State Petroleum Corporation (GSPC), with which this special purpose
vehicle (KGGNL) was originally formed along with the Investment Corporation of
Andhra Pradesh (InCAP) and Infrastructure Development Finance Corporation
(IDFC) have been retained as partners but their equity has been slashed to 11 per
cent each.
Distribution network:
The decision to enlist RIL as the major shareholder was taken at a Cabinet meeting
here on Monday following indications that GSPC might not supply gas before till
64
2012. In contrast, RIL was in a position to ensure supply shortly to Hyderabad,
Kakinada, Tirupati, Vijayawada, Visakhapatnam and Rajahmundry and to the
entire State later.
Briefing reporters, Information Minister A. Ramanarayan Reddy said that RIL had
already submitted bids to the Petroleum & Natural Gas Regulatory Board to lay the
distribution network in these cities.
The Cabinet approved an additional cost of Rs 335 crore for the Rs 1,255-crore
Machilipatnam Port Project as the project site was shifted from Gogileru to
Machilipatnam (Gilakaladinne) in tune with popular sentiments.It resolved to
extend assistance to the developer, Maytas Infra, as a committee of secretaries
committee and WAPCOS, consultants, found the extra cost “justifiable”.
Hike approved
The Cabinet approved hike in cost of Pranahita-Chevella project by Rs 3,635 crore
(Rs 34,865 to Rs 38,500 crore) as this would correspondingly increase the project’s
ayacut by 4.2 lakh acres (Rs 12.2 lakh acres to 16.4 lakh acres) in Adilabad,
Karimnagar, Medak, Nalgonda, Nizamabad and Ranga Reddy districts.
ONGC Eyes Partners for KG Basin Gas Block ONGC is in talks with several oil
majors to replace Statoil and Petrobars following the companies' decisions to pull
out of an exploration venture in the KG Basin.
"We are talking to a lot of people," ONGC Chairman and Managing Director R S
Sharma said.
65
Exxon Mobil Corp. is among the companies ONGC is reportedly in talks with, but
Sharma refused to divulge details.
"We are looking at firms for technology (to produce gas from ultra deep sea) and
risk sharing," ONGC Director (Finance) Dinesh K Sarraf said.
State oil and Petro bras, two specialists in deep-sea production technologies,
decided to quit block KG-DWN-98/2 due to government delays in approving their
participation in the deepwater acreage.
Similarly, Statoil has decided against participating in future drilling in the acreage
off the Andhra coast.
This follows apparent unwillingness of the Petroleum Ministry and its technical
wing DGH to accord approvals for equity participation by foreign companies and
the inordinate delays in clearing the drilling programs.
ONGC now wants another foreign partner to share risks in developing the acreage,
which is estimated to have an in-place gas reserve of 14 trillion cubic feet.
The state-owned firm does not have the production technology to produce gas from
such water depth in the geologically hostile KG basin.
ONGC, a few years back, had bought 90 percent stake in the block from Cairn
India. In 2007, it farmed out 15 percent interest in the block to Petrobras and 10
percent to Norsk Hydro (now Statoil).
Cairn India currently has 10 percent stake in the block while ONGC has 65 percent
interest.
The block now has 10 discoveries and appraisal drilling is now required to be
66
carried out to assess the potential before finalizing development of gas fields.
Sharma said gas production from the KG block will begin in 2015-16, instead of
2013 as anticipated earlier.
Peak output from the field is seen at 20-25 million standard cubic meters per day,
he said.
67
US files trade dispute over EU poultry import laws
October 8th, 2009 GENEVA - The US asked the World Trade Organisation to rule
on a European Union (EU) ban on US poultry treated with chemicals. The US
contends the EU ban does not comply with international trade rules, saying
methods used in the country which involve chemicals are safe.
68
Anil Ambani group wants NTPC as party in Reliance gas row
September 16th, 2009 NEW DELHI - The Anil Ambani group asked the Supreme
Court to make the state-run power utility NTPC a party to its dispute with the
Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries over natural gas supplies from the
Krishna-Godavari basin. The petition said both NTPC and Reliance Natural
Resources of the Anil Ambani group have common issues in their disputes with
Reliance Industries over supplies of natural gas at $2.34 per unit for 17 years.
69
NTPC said the July 31 ruling of the Bombay High Court that allows Reliance
Industries to amend its response midway through the adjudication process was
"legally untenable".
70
RIL`s KG gas output crosses 50 mmscmd, topples ONGC
Reliance Industries has become the largest natural gas producer in the country with
its over 50 million standard cubic meter per day (mmscmd )output surpassing
state-run Oil and Natural Gas Corp`s output.
71
CHAPTER-V
CONCLUSION
72
Natural gas from Krishna-Godavari basin for south India from 2012
Union Petroleum Secretary S Sundareshan on March 20th said that south India will
start getting natural gas from the Krishna-Godavari basin from 2012.
The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas had called for a meeting of Reliance
Industries Ltd (which owns the gas fields) and Gas Authority of India Ltd (which
lays pipelines) about ten days ago and told them to implement the project in a
“strict timeframe”.
Reliance has been authorised by the government to lay a pipeline from Kakinada to
Chennai and this pipeline would further extend to Tuticorin. Reliance would also
lay a pipeline between Chennai and Bangalore, he told a press conference here.
The gas would start flowing to Tamil Nadu anytime between March 2012 and the
end of that year, he said. There would be connectivity to Madras Fertilisers Ltd and
SPIC, he said, referring to the two fertiliser companies, whose operations are
suffering for want of natural gas.
On the issue of pricing of petroleum products, he said, “It is not possible to insulate
consumers continuously from the volatile international crude price and the
government has to take a hard decision in the future.
At present, subsidy component for petrol is Rs.5 per litre, for diesel Rs. 3, for
kerosene Rs. 16 and for LPG Rs. 260 a cylinder. Due to under-pricing the
government had incurred an expenditure of Rs.45,000 crore in the current financial
year. Poor people were forced to pay for supplying subsidised petrol and petroleum
products to those who were affluent.
Increasing demand
73
The Secretary said oil marketing companies were fully geared to meet the
increasing demand for petroleum products, which had been increasing at 15 per
cent per annum for petrol, 8 to 9 per cent for diesel, and 10 per cent for LPG. In
Tamil Nadu every year there had been a 10 per cent increase of LPG consumers.
The State had achieved a coverage of 75 per cent in respect of LPG supply in the
State, which might increase to 83 per cent in the next four or five years.
There was no shortage of LPG supply in the State and new connections were being
released to prospective consumers without any waiting list and efforts were being
made to supply refills expeditiously.
To meet future demand, infrastructure was being augmented and LPG storage
facilities were being put up in Coimbatore, Ilayangudi, Tiruchi, Ennore and
Gummidipoondi, he added.
74
Bibliography:
www.yahoo.com
www.msn.com
www.google.com
www.ask.com
NEWS PAPERS
MAGAZINES
75
THANK
YOU
76