Note:According to the book The Polyester Prince, legendary
Dhirubhai Ambani is said to have advised a fellow businessman that one
should never do an illegal thing in business. Just get the law changed.
It was in the pre-1991 era. Now the new dictum is just get the minister
changed. Sudini Jaipal Reddy was made the Union Minister for Science and Technology and Earth Science's on 29 October 2012. Earlier, he was Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas from January 2011.
The oil ministry had imposed a fine of 7000 Rs. crores on Mukesh
Ambani's company for the sharp drop in production of gas and violations
mentioned in CAG's 2011 report. The oil ministry did not approve
company's US$7.2 billion stake in deal with BP under him. It is alleged
that pressure from the corporate houses ensured his removal from the ministry. Earlier, he was Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas from January 2011. The oil ministry had imposed a fine of 7000 Rs. crores on Mukesh Ambani's company for the sharp drop in production of gas and violations mentioned in CAG's 2011 report. The oil ministry did not approve company's US$7.2 billion stake in deal with BP under him. It is alleged that pressure from the corporate houses ensured his removal from the ministry. With the new Companies Act 2013, the law too has been changed which has ensured that corporates take the responsibility of running the political parties and as a quid pro quo the parties will take care of their interests and promote shareholder democracy and advertising and brand positioning through corporate social responsibilities and corporate NGO responsibilities. Gopal Krishna
ToxicsWatch Alliance (TWA)
Moily dragging his feet as RIL sits pretty on huge gas reserves
DGH had recommended RIL be made to relinquish 86% of total contract area
In total disregard of the adverse observations by the Comptroller and
Auditor General (CAG) and recommendations by the oil regulator Director
General of Hydrocarbons (DGH), the Petroleum Ministry continues to drag
its feet on the decision to direct Mukesh Ambani-owned Reliance
Industries Limited (RIL) to relinquish 6,601 sq.km. of the contract area
(86 per cent of the total area) in the KG D6 block which potentially
holds gas reserves worth $4.83 billion.
The total contract area in the KG-DWN-98/3 block is 7,645 sq km. The
DGH’s recommendations — based on data furnished by the operator from
time to time and CAG’s views — were made in December 2012 and again in
April this year and endorsed by the Joint Secretary (Exploration) as
well as the Petroleum Secretary.
However, the file has been lying with Petroleum Minister Veerappa Moily
for months. On June 16, Mr. Moily had stated that a decision on the
issue would not be taken on the mere technicality of rules.
“Automatically, technically applying a rule is good for you [but] it is
not good for the country,” he said, without elaborating. Ministry
officials had concurred with the DGH view that RIL had overshot the time
allotted to it for developing the area and so should, as per contract,
be asked to relinquish most of the KG-D6 area.
The CAG had, in its Performance Audit of Hydrocarbon Production Sharing
Contract (PSC) report no. 19, stated that the Ministry should review the
determination of the entire contract area of KG-DWN-98/3 as a
“discovery area”.
The audit report had said the Ministry should delineate the stipulated
25 per cent relinquishment area each on the conclusion of the 1st and
2nd exploration phases, and then correctly delineate the discovery area
strictly based on the PSC definition, linked to well or wells drilled in
that part, without considering any subsequent discoveries (which are
invalid on account of non-compliance with PSC provisions).
The Ministry had on November 28, 2011, written to RIL about the CAG
observations and advised it to comply within 120 days. The RIL replied
on March 26, 2012, submitting that the contract area was retained by the
contractor in accordance with the provisions of the PSC and this was
approved by the government Management Committee (MC).
In reply to the contentions made by RIL and its argument on
relinquishment of part of area measuring 4,233 sq.km. area and also
about the status of 19 discoveries made in the block, the DGH, in its
April 2013 letter to the Ministry, rejected RIL’s offer to relinquish
4,233 sq.km. of low-prospect area, asserting that the company should
contractually give up 6,601 sq.km.
“It is proposed that in accordance with Article 3.11 of the PSC and
considering the status of 19 discoveries, the Petroleum Exploration
Licence [PEL] for an area of 6,601 sq.km. will cease to be in force in
the first instance, out of the original contract area of 7,645 sq.km.
This will leave, in the first instance, an area of 1,044 sq.km. to be
retained by the operator [RIL] consisting of 618.12 sq.km. of existing
PEL areas and an area of 425.88 sq.km. [out of 1,664 sq.km. proposed by
the operator].”
The DGH had maintained that of the 19 oil and gas discoveries claimed by
RIL, three finds have not been established as commercially viable in
the absence of test data and the company has not submitted any
investment plans for another five. According to the DGH’s calculations,
6,601 sq.km. of contract area proposed for cessation has at least 1.15
trillion cubic feet of known recoverable gas reserves valued at $4.83
billion at current prices.
“In view of the above, the Petroleum Ministry may intimate the
contractor about cessation of PEL in respect of 6,601 sq.km. of contract
area in the first instance in the KG-D6 under Article 3.11 of PSC,” the
DGH letter concluded.
Dasgupta asks PM to enforce DGH order
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh should immediately intervene and direct
the Petroleum Ministry to accept the recommendations of the DGH asking
RIL to relinquish 86 per cent of the contract area in the KG-D6 block,
Communist Party of India MP Gurudas Dasgupta has said.
Mr. Dasgupta has alleged a scam of Rs. 60,000 crore in allowing RIL to
continue holding on to the area whose timelines had expired under the
contract. He said if this area was relinquished and the discoveries
handed over to Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited (ONGC) for
production, the government could realise Rs. 60,000 crore through sale
of gas from these discoveries. “We are witnessing a sorry spectacle of
the private contractor [RIL] trying to browbeat its own regulator [DGH]
who is an honest officer trying to uphold public interest, and the
government has remained a silent spectator,’’ he said in a letter to the
Prime Minister.
The MP also sought an end to the “witch hunting being indulged in of the
honest officers by the Petroleum Minister” and urged him [Dr. Singh] to
prevent the ouster of DGH R.N. Choubey from his post before the expiry
of his three-year term. In December last, the DGH submitted a report
regarding relinquishment to be done by RIL based on the CAG’s
observations. The DGH again wrote in April last giving details of the
matter and insisting that relinquishment be done as per the production
sharing contract . “The view of the DGH was examined by the Petroleum
Ministry and the Secretary, Petroleum, and Joint Secretary, Petroleum,
endorsed them. When the matter reached the Petroleum Minister, he
overruled all the officials and directed that RIL be consulted in the
matter,” he said.
http://www.thehindu.com/business/Industry/moily-dragging-his-feet-as-ril-sits-pretty-on-huge-gas-reserves/article5200972.ece
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