RIL, BP to acquire Niko’s 10% stake in gas block

Tunia Cherian Updated - January 15, 2018 at 06:34 PM.

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Reliance Industries and British energy giant BP Plc will acquire their cash-strapped partner Niko Resources’ 10 per cent stake in gas discovery block NEC- 25 in the Bay of Bengal.

In mid-2015, Niko had chosen to withdraw from the NEC-25 block and relinquish its interest to the remaining stakeholders.

RIL is the operator of the block with 60 per cent interest, while BP of the UK has the remaining 30 per cent stake.

“The application for assignment of Niko’s PI (participating interest) to BP and RIL has been submitted and the same is awaiting Government of India approval,” RIL said in its notes to 2016-17 earnings last week.

Niko’s 10 per cent interest will be split between RIL and BP in proportion to their equity stake.

Gas discoveries in the North-East Coast block NEC-0SN-97/1 (NEC-25) hold recoverable reserves of 1.032 trillion cubic feet.

The Canadian company has been facing cash problems and had even put up for sale its interest in NEC-25 as well as 10 per cent stake in RIL’s Krishna Godavari basin oil and gas producing block KG-DWN-98/3 or KG-D6. It has not been able to find a buyer though.

RIL also stated that the block oversight panel, called Management Committee (MC), has reviewed the declaration of commerciality (DoC) of gas find D-32 in the block.

MC is headed by upstream regulator, the Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH), which had previously refused to give formal recognition to the D-32 and D-40 discoveries in the block due to the absence of its mandated confirmatory tests.

The DGH had also previously not approved a $3.5 billion plan for developing gas discoveries in block NEC-25 in the absence of its prescribed Drill Stem Test (DST) to confirm two of the finds.

Thereafter, the partners decided to go for the DST test on one of the finds and relinquish or give up the other.

RIL in March 2013 had submitted a $3.5 billion Integrated Field Development Plan for producing 10 million standard cubic metres per day of gas from the discoveries D-32, D-40, D-9 and D-10 in NEC-25 by mid-2019.

The DGH, the nodal technical arm of the Oil Ministry, has however refused to bring the development plan to the management committee for approval, disputing commerciality of D-32 and D-40 in the absence of Drill Stem Tests (DSTs).

RIL-BP-Niko decided to relinquish D-40 and conduct DST on D-32.

According to RIL, D-32 and D-40 hold an in-place reserve of up to 663 billion cubic feet capable of producing 170 million standard cubic feet per day.

RIL has so far made eight gas discoveries in the block.

MC reviewing the commerciality of D-32 paves the way for re-submission of the field development plan (FDP) and its consideration by the committee, sources said.

Published on April 30, 2017 05:32