The petroleum ministry has pulled up both GAIL and the cash-short oil marketing companies (OMCs) for bidding to get capital-intensive gas pipeline projects at a time when gas availability is uncertain.
The ministry has asked the OMCs to again approach their respective Boards for fresh approval before taking on such commitments.
The decision was taken at a meeting last month chaired by additional secretary Sudhir Bhargava and attended by representatives of GAIL and the three OMCs - Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum.
"Since public money is involved and the pipelines have long gestation and are cash-intensive, the Boards of the companies must carefully examine and be convinced about gas availability before committing funds for projects. Ideally, trunk gas pipelines should synchronise with the gas source to avoid idling of resources," the ministry observed during the meeting.
It wants the OMCs to carefully re-examine the assumptions of gas availability and the effect of a lower availability on the project's internal rate of return (IRR).
The Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board last year invited bids for three trunk pipelines - Mallavaram (near Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh)-Bhopal-Bhilwara (Rajasthan)-Vijaipur (near Guna in Madhya Pradesh; Mehsana (Gujarat)-Bhatinda (Punjab); and Bhatinda-Jammu. A GAIL-EIL consortium and the GSPC-OMCs
It's time for India to step on the gas
Hiranandani to enter LNG market
Petronet to market natural gas
Egypt unrest: Indian cos keeping fingers crossed
IOC eyes foreign players to develop LNG terminal