India's biggest oil producer Oil and Natural Gas Corp on Friday restored 70 per cent of gas supplies from Bombay High fields, which had earlier dropped to 20 per cent after a key oil facility was gutted in a fire two-days ago.
"We have restored 7.5 million standard cubic meter per day of gas supplies from today (Friday), while oil output is at 150,000 barrels per day," said a senior company official from Mumbai.
The Bombay High field produced 10.2 mmscmd of gas and 260,000 barrels of oil per day before the devastating fire at the Bombay High North platform, the biggest oil gathering facility in the northern part of the field.
"The entire 110,000 barrels per day of oil production from Bombay High North is down. But we have made arrangements to supply gas by bypassing the destroyed facility," the official said.
The company hopes to restore gas supplies to normal production in a few weeks time, while 70 per cent of the lost oil output is likely to be restored in four weeks.
The 15 wells that poured oil into Bombay High North automatically shut after the fire broke out, possibly due to rupture in a gas line on collision of an offshore supply vessel with the platform.
While the platform was insured for $195 million, the supply vessel, which was also gutted in the fire, was insured for $60 million. Building a new platform will cost at least $300 million.
Officials said state-run gas utility GAIL (India) Ltd, which markets the gas produced at Bombay High offshore, has made a pro-rata cut in supplies to customers.
The fire, which occurred at 1605 hrs on July 27, wiped away 15 per cent of India's 665,000 barrels per day oil output.
Of the 384 people present at the platform, the offshore supply vessel and the nearby rig, which was also abandoned after the fire, 355 have been rescued. Eleven people are confirmed dead, while 12 are still missing. Six divers trapped in a decompression chamber of the ill-fated vessel would be rescued by Saturday, the official said.
The Bombay High field, 160-km northwest of Mumbai in the Arabian sea, which produced about 682,000 barrels a day (34 million tonnes) accounting for more than half of the country's oil production, are broadly divided into two - Bombay High North and Bombay High South.
BHN, built in 1981, was used to separate gas and impurities from the crude oil produced from 15 wells in its vicinity, before feeding it into the BUT (Bombay High-Uran Trunk crude oil pipeline) for taking it to shore.