Speaking on sidelines of Petrotech pre-event conference, Rae said the $40-42 per barrel net price realised by ONGC after paying for fuel subsidies, is barely enough to meet its costs.
"Upstream companies (like ONGC) bear disproportionately high subsidy burden.
“They need to generate investible surplus," he said, adding USD 65 is the minimum price that is needed to help bring marginal and deeper fields into production.
Upstream firms pay for a portion of fuel subsidies by extending discounts on crude oil they sell to refiners who are forced by the government to sell diesel and cooking fuel at rates lower than cost of production.
"It makes sense to pay them a price of $65 and produce more domestic crude oil rather than pay $110 per barrel for importing the same," he said.
"We agree that the burden of upstream companies should be reduced."
"They need more money to monetise some of the discoveries.
“There are certain discoveries which become viable only at $65
SPECIAL: India eyes $15-bn rollover of subsidy costs into next budget
OilMin moots Rs 4.50/L HIKE in diesel, Rs 100 for LPG
Govt mulls partial rollback of diesel price hike
IOC stake sale decision deferred after Oil Ministry opposition
OilMin to seek higher diesel price increase