Oil regulator DGH has recommended an additional penalty of $781 million on Reliance Industries, taking the total fine on the company for producing less than projected natural gas from KG-D6 fields to $1.786 billion.
The Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH) last month recommended to the Oil Ministry that $781 million of the cost RIL has incurred in KG-D6 fields be disallowed for producing only an average of 26.07 million cubic meters per day of gas as against the target of 86.73 mmcmd in 2012-13.
This will be in addition to $1.005 billion in cost recovery already disallowed for output falling short of targets during 2010-11 and 2011-12, a top official said.
“DGH had in July 22 letter proposed for disallowance of cumulative cost recovery amounting to $1.786 billion ($1.005 billion plus $781 million) up to FY 2012-13 towards creation of excess capacity,” he said.
It blamed RIL for not drilling its committed quota of wells leading to fall in production, resulting in a large chunk of production facilities lying unused or under-utilised.
RIL has built infrastructure to handle 80 mmscmd of output but is currently producing less than 14 mmscmd.
As per the production sharing contract, RIL and its partners BP Plc and Niko Resources are allowed to deduct all of the capital and operating expenses from sale of gas before sharing profits with the government. Creation of excess or unutilised infrastructure impacts government’s profit share and this is being sought to be corrected by disallowing part of the cost.
DGH, the official said, stated that after cost disallowance, RIL would be required to pay $114 million in additional profit petroleum to the government for 2012-13 in addition to $103 million that was already due.
The Oil Ministry is yet to act on the advice of DGH as the previous cost recovery disallowance notice is under arbitration.
While DGH made a case against RIL for not meeting the gas output projects, the regulator in a separate communication to the ministry took a diagonally opposite view on the issue of capping gas prices and the company being asked to deliver gas shortfall at old prices.
It said companies cannot be held against the projected output in a field development plan due to the dynamic nature of the exploration and production.
DGH Head of PSC Anurag Gupta on August 1 wrote that projected production in most blocks would not be identical with actual output “because of the dynamic nature of exploration and production activities which need to be adapted to suit the ground realities and operational requirements.”
Published - August 07, 2013 06:40 pm IST