The company is interested in the large gas reserves of the nation. India has already partnered Turkmenistan to import gas through the transnational Tapi (Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India) pipeline project.
At the Petrotech conference in New Delhi last month, Turkmenistan's Acting Minister of Oil & Gas Industry and Mineral Resources Kakageldy Abdullaev had invited Indian companies Gail and OVL to make investments in his country.
"We are very keen to invest in the E&P sector of Turkmenistan, particularly its gas reserves.
"We have had few meetings with key people from the country. Their government delegation is likely to be here later this year," said D K Sarraf, managing director, OVL.
Turkmenistan offers service contracts to the foreign companies, while OVL is keen to enter through a production-sharing contract.
"Turkmenistan prefers service contracts, but we are keen to have a production-sharing contract.
"We are trying to convince them of the positives in a production-sharing contract," said Sarraf.
Pointing to the gas reserves of the nation, he said that one of Turkmenistan's leading gas fields, Galkynysh, has reserves that could feed 180 liquefied natural gas (LNG) trains of 5 million tonnes each for 30
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