Even as domestic gas production has fallen 8 per cent, Oil India Ltd (OIL) is planning to set up a liquefied natural gas (LNG) receiving terminal in India. The company plans to set up a 2.5-million tonne (mt) capacity terminal.
When asked, Ananth Kumar, director (finance), Oil India, confirmed the appointment of a consultant about a fortnight ago, but did not divulge the name, citing a confidentiality clause in the contract.
To begin with, Oil India is looking at the feasibility of setting up two LNG storage tanks of 160,000 cubic metres each along with regasification facility, a jetty and associated marine facilities, said the industry executive. The consultant would also look at the feasibility of scaling up the capacity to 5 mt.
OIL is a government-owned oil and gas explorer with interest in 65 domestic and 20 overseas blocks. With the proposed LNG terminal, the company will join the league of Petronet LNG Ltd (PLL) and Shell India, two gas importers in the country.
The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) said in a recent report that a temporary spike in supply, driven largely by the shale-gas boom in the US and that country's commensurately lower demand for LNG, has created a window of opportunity for India to source LNG through 2015 and beyond on relatively attractive terms.
"The window is expected to last one or two years and will close as recontracting of LNG supply by major Asian countries gathers speed. Hence, India must seize the moment and act quickly. LNG prices are already trending higher," the BCG report said.
Besides OIL, its bigger peer Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC)
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