The EGoM headed by Defence Minister A K Antony was scheduled to meet on Tuesday to consider abolishing the priority ranking in natural gas allocation so that fuel currently consumed by urea plants can also be diverted to fuel-starved power plants.
"The EGoM is not happening tomorrow," a source with direct knowledge of the development said.
Another source said the meeting has been postponed as the Oil Ministry has parallelly approached the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs for raising natural gas prices.
Some like the Finance Ministry want a reconciliation between the two proposals.
The Oil Ministry in a proposal to EGoM sought abolishing the priority ranking according to which natural gas is first given to urea manufacturing fertiliser plants, then to LPG units, followed by power plants, city gas, steel and refineries, sources said.
This priority ranking meant when output from Reliance Industries' eastern offshore KG-D6 fields started falling in 2011, supplies to refineries was cut first and was followed by steel and city gas sectors.
From November 2011, supplies to 25 power plants, which had signed for 29.74 million standard cubic meters per day of KG-D6 gas, were pro-rata cut and this year completely stopped as KG-D6 plummeted to one-fourth of volumes touched in March 2010.
Sources said the current KG-D6 production of about 15 mmscmd is just sufficient to meet the full requirement of fertiliser sector and some of
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