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Rediff.com  » Business » Ambani dispute hurt gas auction: DGH

Ambani dispute hurt gas auction: DGH

Source: PTI
October 12, 2009 14:21 IST
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Upstream oil and gas regulator DGH on Monday attributed the poor interest in auction of exploration blocks to the Ambani brothers' gas dispute.

"The (gas) utilisation policy and the pricing are very well clarified in our Production Sharing Contract but these have been regrettably openly challenged," Director General of Hydrocarbons V K Sibal told reporters at the end of the eighth round of bidding for oil and gas blocks.

Bids were received for only 36 of the 70 blocks that were on offer. BHP Biliton of Australia, BG of UK and Cairn Energy were the only notable foreign companies that joined the bid, besides home grown giants like ONGC.

Mukesh Ambani-led RIL did not put in any bid for oil and gas blocks, although it showed interest in one Coal Bed Methane block that is on auction separately.

"This (legal challenge has) sent wrong signal across the world," Sibal said without naming the Anil Ambani group, which has challenged the overnment's right to decide on commercial utilisation of gas and approve pricing of the same.

Anil-run RNRL is seeking to enforce a 2005 family pact requiring elder brother Mukesh-headed Reliance Industries to supply natural gas from its KG-D6 field to a plant in Uttar Pradesh at a price 44 per cent cheaper than the government-approved rate of $4.20 per mmBtu.

The Supreme Court is slated to start hearing on the matter from October 20.

"When you invite investment, the signals are what matter the most. We have one of the best PSCs in the world, but wrong signals have gone resulting in what you say is a poor response," said Sibal, who the Anil Ambani group has charged with favouring Mukesh Ambani-led RIL.

Essar Oil was the most aggressive bidder bidding for six CBM blocks, RIL one, while Arrow Energy of Australia bid for two. ONGC bid for one block in consortium with Jindal Petroleum and Neyvelli Lignite.

Sibal had earlier said that "negative publicity because of the fight between two corporate giants" would result in fewer bids. "Any fight between corporates has a negative impact. No fight has a positive impact."

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