RIL invites price bids for CBM gasPublished on Fri, Feb 03, 2012 at 21:24 | Source : PTI Updated at Mon, Feb 06, 2012 at 09:01
With the government reluctant to approve its pricing formula for gas produced from coal seams (CBM), Reliance Industries today invited bids from potential consumers, asking them to quote a rate indexed to the price of imported LNG. RIL, in an advertisement issued in national and regional dailies, asked consumers to quote a figure in US dollars per million British thermal units that can be added to the price at which Petronet LNG ships gas in its liquid state (liquefied natural gas or LNG) from While its eastern offshore KG-D6 gas price is fixed at USD 4.205 per mmBtu for the five years ending March 31, 2014, RIL had on September 16 demanded that coal bed methane (CBM) it plans to produce from its Sohagpur block in Madhya Pradesh should be priced by the same formula as Petronet's Qatar LNG deal. It had sought 12.67 per cent of the average price of crude oil imported into At a USD 100 per barrel JCC average, CBM -- according to RIL's September formula -- would cost USD 12.67 per mmBtu plus USD 0.26 per mmBtu, totalling USD 12.93 per mmBtu. Great Eastern Energy Corp (GEECL) is selling CBM produced from its Raniganj block in RIL, in today's advertisement, has retained the pricing formula and asked users to quote a positive or negative number that can be added to this pricing formula. The company is also demanding a marketing margin of USD 0.15 per mmBtu from CBM users, even though its USD 0.135 per mmBtu marketing margin charged on KG-D6 gas has been sent to oil regulator PNGRB for review. Sources said the Oil Ministry was reluctant to approve the price sought by RIL in September last year as nowhere in the world is domestic gas priced at LNG rates. Moreover, LNG costs more than domestic gas because of the huge investment that goes into putting up a liquefaction plant that turns natural gas into a liquid state by cooling it at sub-zero temperatures so that it can be shipped. The ministry scoffed at the price sought by RIL as RasGas supplies gas rich in ethane (C2) and propane (C3), which are useful in the manufacture of LPG and petrochemicals. On the other hand, CBM is just methane (C1) with no properties to make LPG/chemicals. RIL, in today's advertisement, said it will produce a peak output of 3.5 million standard cubic metres per day of gas from the Sohagpur blocks by the second half of 2014.
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