ONGC to incur huge loss due to revision in gas price
Gas

ONGC to incur huge loss due to revision in gas price

As per the company, the current gas price does not cover cost and it has made representations to the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas for suitable amendments to the formula.

  • By ICN Bureau | October 10, 2020
India's largest state run gas PSU ONGC on Friday said it is losing Rs. 6,000-7,000 crore on natural gas business after the government-mandated rates for the fuel dropped to a decade low.
 
The government-mandated rates are way below the cost of production of $3.5-3.7 per mmBtu, Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) director (Finance) Subhash Kumar said.
 
Every dollar reduction in gas price leads to a revenue loss of about Rs 5,200 crore and a Rs 3,500 crore on profit.
 
"Our losses will be in the order of Rs 6,000-7,000 crore in current fiscal," he said.
 
ONGC has been incurring losses on the 65 million standard cubic meters per day of gas it produces from domestic fields after the government in November 2014 introduced a new gas pricing formula that had "inherent limitations" as it was based on pricing hubs of gas surplus countries such as the US, Canada, and Russia.
 
The price, according to this formula, is revised twice a year and the rate for the period beginning October 1 has been cut by 25 per cent to $1.79 per mmBtu.
 
He, however, hoped the government will act on the firm's request and a floor price would be set to check losses.
 
ONGC chairman and managing director Shashi Shanker said the current gas price does not cover cost and the company has made representations to the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas for suitable amendments to the formula.
 
"Ministry is seized of the matter. They are favourably inclined and a committee has been constituted to look into this," he said.
 
Prices have to be remunerative if the domestic output has to be raised, he said.
 
"There is talk of a floor price and changes in the formula itself by linking the rate to relevant market benchmarks such as JKM. I cannot comment on what shape it will take but we are certainly hopeful," he said.
 
While the $1.79 per mmBtu rate applies to gas produced from fields given to the company on a nomination basis, ONGC has pricing freedom on blocks or areas it had won in auctions since 1999.
 
Shanker said the marketing freedom granted by the government earlier this week would help monetise gas discoveries in such blocks.
 
The new policy allows affiliates to bid for the gas to be produced from such blocks. ONGC group companies, which have been using imported LNG as fuel, would now be able to participate in the price discovery auctions, he said.
 
This would create competition and help realise better prices for ONGC. The group companies would also save by replacing imported fuel with domestically produced gas, he said.

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