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India may renegotiate LNG import contracts at appropriate time: Dharmendra Pradhan

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Published : Aug 26, 2019, 5:34 PM IST

He was asked if the government is looking at renegotiating liquefied natural gas (LNG) contracts in view of fall in prices of the fuel available in spot or current market to which he said that India may renegotiate LNG import contracts at an appropriate time.

Dharmendra Pradhan

New Delhi: India may look at renegotiating pricing of its long-term LNG import contracts at an "appropriate time" to help reflect falling rates of the spot market, Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said on Monday.

"We see that at an appropriate time," he told reporters on sidelines of an industry event here.

He was asked if the government is looking at renegotiating liquefied natural gas (LNG) contracts in view of fall in prices of the fuel available in spot or current market.

India imports 8.5 million tonnes per annum of LNG from Qatar under two long-term contracts and has tied up 5.8 million tonnes a year supplies from the US. It also has a 2.5 million tonnes import contract with Gazprom of Russia and a 1.44 million tonnes deal with Gorgon project of Australia.

While long-term LNG from Qatar comes for USD 8.5-9 per million British thermal units, the same gas is available in the spot market for less than half the price.

Pradhan, however, said the long-term contracts have to be honoured.

India has in the past used its status as Asia's third-largest LNG buyer to renegotiate deals with Qatar, Australia, and Russia. In 2015, it renegotiated the price of the long-term deal to import 7.5 million tonnes per year of LNG from Qatar, helping save Rs 8,000 crore.

In 2017, it got Exxon Mobil Corp to lower the price of Gorgon LNG and last year convinced Gazprom to lower rates too.
Sources, however, said the price of LNG from these contracts still was significantly higher than spot prices and if the trend continues users may seek a review.

Read More: EPFO to launch e-inspection system to simplify process

Prabhat Singh, Managing Director of Petronet LNG Ltd - the firm which has long term LNG import contracts with Qatar and Australia, had on August 7 stated that price sensitivities of consumers will have to be respected.

Earlier speaking at the event, Pradhan said as much as Rs 5 lakh crore is likely to be invested in the natural gas sector in the country to boost usage of the environment-friendly fuel.

This investment will be in the expansion of city gas network, laying pipelines, setting up LNG import facilities and natural gas exploration, he said.

LNG import terminal capacity in the country is likely to grow from 38.8 million tonnes per annum presently to 52.5 million tonnes in the next 3-4 years with new facilities coming up at Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh, Dhamra in Odisha, Jaigarh in Maharashtra and Chhara and Jafrabad terminals in Gujarat.

Also, 14,788 km of pipelines are being added to existing 16,788 km network to take the fuel to all corners of the country, he said adding city gas distribution network is being expanded to over 400 districts.

The investment will help raise the share of natural gas in the country's overall energy mix to 15 per cent by 2030 from the current 6.2 per cent.

New Delhi: India may look at renegotiating pricing of its long-term LNG import contracts at an "appropriate time" to help reflect falling rates of the spot market, Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said on Monday.

"We see that at an appropriate time," he told reporters on sidelines of an industry event here.

He was asked if the government is looking at renegotiating liquefied natural gas (LNG) contracts in view of fall in prices of the fuel available in spot or current market.

India imports 8.5 million tonnes per annum of LNG from Qatar under two long-term contracts and has tied up 5.8 million tonnes a year supplies from the US. It also has a 2.5 million tonnes import contract with Gazprom of Russia and a 1.44 million tonnes deal with Gorgon project of Australia.

While long-term LNG from Qatar comes for USD 8.5-9 per million British thermal units, the same gas is available in the spot market for less than half the price.

Pradhan, however, said the long-term contracts have to be honoured.

India has in the past used its status as Asia's third-largest LNG buyer to renegotiate deals with Qatar, Australia, and Russia. In 2015, it renegotiated the price of the long-term deal to import 7.5 million tonnes per year of LNG from Qatar, helping save Rs 8,000 crore.

In 2017, it got Exxon Mobil Corp to lower the price of Gorgon LNG and last year convinced Gazprom to lower rates too.
Sources, however, said the price of LNG from these contracts still was significantly higher than spot prices and if the trend continues users may seek a review.

Read More: EPFO to launch e-inspection system to simplify process

Prabhat Singh, Managing Director of Petronet LNG Ltd - the firm which has long term LNG import contracts with Qatar and Australia, had on August 7 stated that price sensitivities of consumers will have to be respected.

Earlier speaking at the event, Pradhan said as much as Rs 5 lakh crore is likely to be invested in the natural gas sector in the country to boost usage of the environment-friendly fuel.

This investment will be in the expansion of city gas network, laying pipelines, setting up LNG import facilities and natural gas exploration, he said.

LNG import terminal capacity in the country is likely to grow from 38.8 million tonnes per annum presently to 52.5 million tonnes in the next 3-4 years with new facilities coming up at Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh, Dhamra in Odisha, Jaigarh in Maharashtra and Chhara and Jafrabad terminals in Gujarat.

Also, 14,788 km of pipelines are being added to existing 16,788 km network to take the fuel to all corners of the country, he said adding city gas distribution network is being expanded to over 400 districts.

The investment will help raise the share of natural gas in the country's overall energy mix to 15 per cent by 2030 from the current 6.2 per cent.

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EPFO to launch e-inspection system to simplify process
Bengaluru, Aug 26 (PTI) EPFO will launch an e-inspection
system that will simplify inspection process and ensure
organisations with open communications will not be subject to
physical inspection until absolutely necessary, according to
Central Provident Fund Commissioner Sunil Barthwal.
         EPFO (Employees' Provident Fund Organisation) proposed
to amend the Act to limit enquiry period to a maximum of two
years in order to curtail harassment, he also said at a
Confederation of Indian Industry-organised interactive session
last Friday, a CII release said.
         A small percentage of employees are unable to generate
UAN (a 12-digit Universal Account Number to all employees
entitled to EPF) due to mismatch in data, Barthwal said,
adding to address this issue, the EPFO is looking at
alternative authentication vis-a-vis the employee database.
         "The EPFO is working towards a three-day settlement
period for KYC (Know Your Customer) compliant beneficiaries
who have UAN linked to Aadhaar, have a bank account and a
registered mobile number," the release quoted him as saying.
         Barthwal also proposed to set up a society of
self-regulating consultants, similar to ICAI (The Institute of
Chartered Accountants of India), in order to curb "misuse and
corruption."
         "In a significant announcement for industry he
proposed to decriminalise defaulters and treat the cases as
economic offences," the release said.
         The release quoted EPFO officers as saying that the
process of claim has evolved from offline filing to digital
and app-based platform and the next phase of advancement will
be based on big data analytical platform that utilises
artificial intelligence and machine learning to trigger all
activities. PTI RS
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