Monday, February, 26, 2018
  • Nation
  • World
  • States
  • Cities
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Galleries
  • Videos
  • Life Style
  • Specials
  • Opinions
  • All Sections  
    States Tamil Nadu Kerala Karnataka Andhra Pradesh Telangana Odisha
    Cities Chennai DelhiBengaluru Hyderabad Kochi Thiruvananthapuram
    Nation World Business Sport Cricket Football Tennis Other Education Social News
    Entertainment English Hindi Kannada Malayalam Tamil Telugu Review Galleries Videos
    Auto Life style Tech Health Travel Food Books Spirituality
    Opinions Editorials Ask Prabhu Columns Prabhu Chawla T J S George S Gurumurthy Ravi Shankar Shankkar Aiyar Shampa Dhar-Kamath Karamatullah K Ghori
    Today's Paper Edex Indulge Event Xpress Magazine The Sunday Standard E-paper
Home Business

ONGC Videsh Ltd drops plan to build LNG export facility in Iran

By PTI  |   Published: 25th February 2018 04:07 PM  |  

Last Updated: 25th February 2018 04:07 PM  |   A+A A-   |  

0

Share Via Email

The logo of Oil and Natural Gas Corp's (ONGC) is pictured along a roadside in Ahmedabad, India.(Photo |Reuters)

NEW DELHI: ONGC Videsh Ltd has shelved plans to build a USD 5 billion LNG export facility in Iran and has instead opted to only invest in developing a giant gas field in the Persian Gulf, for which a revised cost is being worked out, an official said.

OVL, the overseas arm of state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC), had last year made its 'best' offer to spend USD 11 billion in developing the Farzad-B field in the Persian Gulf as well as in building the infrastructure to export the gas but Iran deterred on awarding the rights of the field to the Indian firm owing to differences over investments and price of gas.

The company has now agreed to do just the upstream field development part, leaving the marketing of the fuel to Iran, the official said.

As had been agreed during the visit of Iranian President Hassam Rouhani earlier this month, a team of OVL officials will be visiting Tehran this week to discuss modalities of the upstream development.

"We had initially thought that the upstream field development would cost USD 6.2 billion. But, this is not the final cost.

We will be able to arrive at a final cost only after we do at least well to appraise the discovery we had made about a decade back," he said.

Only after the appraisal well is drilled and data analysed to see the extent of the field and recoverable reserves can a final cost be put, he said, adding that OVL would put forth the idea of being allowed to drill an appraisal well on the field.

The appraisal well, he said, may take 9-10 months to be drilled and completed.

Farzad-B was discovered by OVL in the Farsi block about 10 years ago.

The project has so far cost the OVL-led consortium, which also includes Oil India Ltd and Indian Oil Corp (IOC), over USD 80 million.

The field has an in-place gas reserve of 21.7 trillion cubic feet, of which 12.5 Tcf are believed to be recoverable.

The official said the field as high sulphur content and the separate facility would be needed to separate gas from it. Costs of these facilities can be established only after an appraisal well is drilled.

In the master development plan OVL submitted to Iran last year, it estimated the upstream part to cost USD 6.2 billion while another USD 5 billion will be required to build a liquefied natural gas (LNG) export facility.

While Iran believes the upstream investment should not be more than USD 5.5 billion, it wanted India to buy all of the natural gas produced from the Persian Gulf block at a price equivalent to the rate Qatar charges for selling LNG to India under a long-term deal.

Qatar, as per a revised formula agreed upon in December 2015, sells 7.5 million tonnes a year of LNG to Petronet LNG Ltd -- India's biggest gas importer -- at a price of USD 7-plus per million British thermal unit.

The rate being sought by Iran was triple of USD 2.3 per mmBtu rate OVL is willing to pay for the gas at low global oil prices.

If global rates rise, OVL was willing to pay USD 4.3 per mmBtu, the official said.

OVL, he said, was willing to negotiate on the upstream cost but wants Iran to take up the marketing of the fuel, including the building of LNG terminal, if it believes it can get a better price for the natural gas elsewhere.

India and Iran were initially targeting concluding a deal on Farzad-B field development by November 2016 but later mutually agreed to push the timeline to February 2017.

The deadline to wrap up negotiations later targeted for September 2017. But, with deal stuck over pricing of gas, no new deadlines have been proposed.

Last year, India cut Iranian crude oil imports by about a quarter to 18.5 million tonnes in 2017-18 fiscal to put pressure on Tehran to quickly wrap up negotiations. It has so far not finalised the volumes it will buy in 2018-19 fiscal.

Stay up to date on all the latest Business news with The New Indian Express App. Download now
TAGS
India cotton exports

O
P
E
N

More from this section
hacking, intelligence, chinese, computer, cyber,

Ransomware set to become more vicious in 2018: Quick Heal

Vodafone CEO hits back at DeutscheTelekom in spat over Liberty talks

Sunil Mittal advocates common networks to push connectivity; admits to resistance

Latest

PNB fraud case: Court allows ED plea for LR's to probe Nirav Modi's overseas assets 

85 per cent votes polled in Tripura re-poll till 4 pm

INX Media case: Karti's CA remanded to 14-day judicial custody

Government publishes names of 9,500 'high risk' NBFC's

Calcutta High Court lawyers' ceasework extended till March 5 

Rs 38 lakh cash seized in Meghalaya a day before polls

Mumbai: Fire breaks out in chawl in Thane

Ravichandran Ashwin to lead Kings XI Punjab in IPL 2018

Videos
Sridevi. (File | AFP)
A look at late Sridevi Kapoor
‘Dark Day’ for Bollywood: Amar Singh breaks down while remembering Sridevi
arrow
Gallery
People holding pictures of victims of the airstrikes and shelling by Syrian government forces in Ghouta, a suburb of Damascus, Syria, gather during a rally outside the Russian Consulate in Istanbul. | AP
Stop bombing Ghouta: People throng outside Russian Consulate in Istanbul to protest against Syrian airstrikes
Two Syrian kids who were wounded during airstrikes and shelling by Syrian government forces, sit at a makeshift hospital, in Ghouta, suburb of Damascus, Syria. | AP
Syria toll touches 500 as eastern Ghouta bombing continues, 130 children amongst dead
arrow

Trending

FOLLOW US

Copyright - newindianexpress.com 2018

Dinamani | Kannada Prabha | Samakalika Malayalam | Malayalam Vaarika | Indulgexpress | Edex Live | Cinema Express | Event Xpress

Contact Us | About Us | Careers | Privacy Policy | Search | Terms of Use | Advertise With Us

Home | Nation | World | Cities | Business | Columns | Entertainment | Sport | Magazine | The Sunday Standard