Pressure is mounting on oil and gas exploration companies as the country’s
natural gas output has fallen for the 17th straight month in April by 11.3 per
cent year-on-year.
Crude oil production, too, dipped 1.3 per cent.
Inadequate indigenous production of crude oil and natural gas has meant
higher dependence on more expensive imports. The availability of imported oil
and gas has been fluctuating from time to time depending upon the demand,
price, and tie-ups with the suppliers.
The domestic gas production is about 115 mmscmd, and supply is about 165
mmscmd. The gap is met through imports.
Today, gas price in the country varies from $4.2/mmBtu to as high as
$16/mmBtu. The drop in output from Reliance Industries-operated
Krishna Godavari
Basin D6 block, which is
the major source of natural gas, pulled down the domestic gas output to 3.633
billion cubic metre (4.096 billion cubic metre) in April, shows Ministry of
Petroleum and Natural Gas data.
Gas output from offshore fields fell 14.2 per cent annually in April at
2.904 billion cubic metre (3.386 billion cubic metre). This is expected to
further decline.
The D6 block is currently producing 32 mmscmd of gas (26 mmscmd from D1 and
D3 fields and 6 mmscmd from MA fields in the block).
Currently, India
imports more than 2.4 million barrels of oil a day of which approximately 0.75
million barrels of oil a day come from domestic supplies.
The country’s crude oil output, which had marginally increased year-on-year
in February, dropped for second consecutive month in April at 3.144 million
tonne annually (3.186 million tonne in the same month last year).
This was mainly because production from Assam fields fell 100 per cent and
ONGC’s Mumbai High fields produced 3.6 per cent less year-on-year.
The Mumbai High fields that account for 42 per cent of domestic oil
production are experiencing a natural decline in output.
Total refinery output of the 17 public sector and two private sectors was
down 2.8 per cent year-on-year at 13.614 million tonne. This was mainly because
the public sector refiners processed 7.7 per cent less in April and refineries
were shut down for maintenance.
Reliance Industries from its first refinery in Jamnagar processed 4.9 per cent more crude
oil in April against the same month last year. The company does not share data
for its second export oriented refinery at Jamnagar . Essar’s Vadinar refinery processed
19.2 per cent more.
Petroleum product consumption in April was up 0.16 per cent year-on-year at
12.66 million tonne. Diesel sales rose by 8 per cent in April, while petrol
consumption was up 3.74 per cent year-on-year.
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