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'Oil sevaks' operate India's biggest oil, gas fields beyond shifts

The employees, including 9 women, are happy to continue working on offshore installations as a nationwide lockdown restricts bringing in their replacement.

April 14, 2020 / 18:22 IST
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Miles away from land, working as well as living on iron structures standing in 70 to 100 metres of sea depth was always considered a physically demanding and potentially dangerous job. And when the 14-day work shift gets extended to as much as 35 days, it certainly can be mentally stressful and physically exhausting. But not for the 4,500 ONGC employees and officers who have been operating India's biggest oil and gas fields in the Arabian Sea as well as fields and installations in the Bay of Bengal to feed the country's energy needs.

The employees, including 9 women, are happy to continue working on offshore installations as a nationwide lockdown restricts bringing in their replacement.

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"I have been receiving messages from these brave employees saying they are happy to continue working on offshore fields as long as it is needed," Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) Chairman and Managing Director Shashi Shanker told PTI here.

Most of India's oil and gas is produced from fields lying below the seabed.

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