RIL changes contracts, prices to rise by 10% over new rate of $8.3
In the new Gas Sale and Purchase
Agreement, RIL has proposed to charge govt-fixed rate for natural gas on
Gross Calorific Value basis instead of current practice of billing $4.2
on Net Calorific Value basis.
New Delhi :
Reliance Industries has made drastic changes in gas supply contracts
that will jack up its KG-D6 gas price by 10 per cent over and above the
new rate of USD 8.3 coming into effect from next month.
RIL has circulated to urea manufacturing
fertiliser units a new Gas Sale and Purchase Agreement (GSPA) for
supply of natural gas from its eastern offshore KG-D6 fields from April 1
upon expiry of current 5-year supply contract at month end.
In the new GSPA, RIL has proposed to
charge government- fixed rate for natural gas on Gross Calorific Value
(GCV) basis instead of current practice of billing USD 4.205 per million
British thermal unit on Net Calorific Value (NCV) basis, sources privy
to the development told PTI.
The heat produced from natural gas is
measured in calorific value. The heat rate is measured in gross (GCV) or
net (NCV) basis. One GCV equals to 0.9 NCV and so on a like to like
basis billing urea plants the new price of USD 8.3 per mmBtu on GCV
would mean an actual rate of USD 9.13 on NCV basis.
A senior official in the fertiliser
ministry said his ministry has taken up the issue of changes made by RIL
in the GSPA with the Oil Ministry.
”We expect the Cabinet decision to
price natural gas based on Rangarajan Committee formula to be
implemented in letter and spirit,” he said.
The Rangarajan formula of pricing
natural gas at an average of international hub rates and actual cost of
importing LNG into India does not specify pricing the fuel on GCV or NCV
basis.
Since gas in its liquid form (liquefied
natural gas or LNG) is imported into India on GCV basis, RIL is using
the same logic to price gas from April 1, sources said.
Currently, most of the domestically produced gas is priced on NCV basis.
Email sent to RIL seeking comments remained unanswered.
Sources said the Fertilizer Association
of India (FAI) has written a letter to the fertiliser ministry raising
concerns about the proposed GSPA. The fertiliser ministry has taken this
up with the Oil Ministry.
As per preliminary calculations made by
the oil ministry, the new rate in April will be USD 8.3 per mmBtu. But
the ministry is unhappy with the rate and has asked for reworking of
some of the numbers.
Gas accounts for nearly 80 per cent of the production cost of urea.
An increase of USD 1 per mmBtu in gas
price translates into an enhanced cost of production of about Rs 1,369
per ton. For 18 million tons of urea produced from gas, USD 1 per mmBtu
price increase translates into an increase in cost of almost Rs 2,465.1
crore.
A USD 4 per mmBtu increase in rate would
mean Rs 9860.4 crore increase in cost of production and using GCV
method would mean a further Rs 2,046 crore increase in cost.
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