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  Business   Gas prices may dip 17 per cent to $3.15 in April

Gas prices may dip 17 per cent to $3.15 in April

PTI
Published : Feb 14, 2016, 12:00 pm IST
Updated : Feb 14, 2016, 12:00 pm IST

Gas price in India is lower than USD 9 per mmBtu in China.

Representational Image.
 Representational Image.

Gas price in India is lower than USD 9 per mmBtu in China.

New Delhi:

Natural gas prices in India are likely to decline 17 per cent in April to USD 3.15 per unit, further straining economics of developing discoveries in deep sea. As per the new gas pricing formula approved by the NDA-government in October 2014, gas prices are to be determined on a semi-annual basis and calculated based on a volume weighted average of rates in gas surplus nations of the US, Canada and Russia, based on the twelve-month trailing average price with a lag of three months.

Using benchmark prices for the period of January 1, 2015 to December 31, 2015, gas price for the period April 2016 to September 2016 is likely to be about USD 3.15 per million British thermal unit as against USD 3.82 currently, sources said. On a net-calorific value (CV) basis, the gas price is likely to be USD 3.50 per mmBtu as compared to USD 4.24 currently.

Development of numerous existing discoveries in the blocks operated by state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) as well as Reliance Industries are dependent on remunerative price. ONGC Chairman and Managing Director Dinesh K Sarraf last week stated that developing finds in the firm's Krishna Godavari (KG) basin block KG-DWN-98/2 or KG-D5 was economically unviable at current price.

The company has asked the government to raise the rates to make developing the explorations economically viable, he had said. Goldman Sachs had in a recent report stated that "Indian domestic natural gas prices that are linked to prices in gas surplus economies remain materially below the costs to develop marginal and deep-water fields and hence do not incentivise exploration and production capex."

This has resulted in Indian producers potentially losing USD 2 billion annually in value added assuming they can replace imports entirely, it added.

"We believe the current gas price regime is not incentivising domestic capex sufficiently as we expect prices under the current formula to decline in 2016-17 while cost for new deep-water discoveries ranges between USD 6 to USD 7 per mmBtu," Goldman had said.

Gas price in India, it said, is lower than USD 9 per mmBtu in China, USD 10.5 in the Philippines, USD 6.5 in Indonesia and USD 8 per mmBtu in Thailand and Malaysia. Sources said going by current price trends, gas price may rise marginally to USD 3.32 (on gross calorific value or GCV basis) in second half of 2016-17 fiscal.

They may further rise to USD 3.36 per mmBtu and USD 3.42 in the first and second half of 2017-18 fiscal and would be around USD 3.45 in the following fiscal.

Location: India, Delhi, New Delhi