In a presentation prepared for the incoming Narendra Modi-government, the ministry listed national oil companies losing focus on domestic exploration as well as legal disputes around signed contracts with private explorers among the five things that went wrong during the United Progressive Alliance regime.
Alongside, it also said increasing cap on supply of subsidised domestic LPG cylinders from 6 to 9 and then to 12 per household in a year should not have happened, sources privy to the development said.
Also, keeping the landmark scheme of Direct Benefit Transfer on LPG or DBTL where customers got subsidy in cash so they could buy cooking gas at market rates, was a mistake, it felt.
Other shortcomings listed included production sharing contracts beset by legal disputes and no clarity on engagement with Iran in view of US sanctions that not just delayed participation in a mega gas field but also cost the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline.
Oil Ministry has been at loggerheads with explorers like Reliance Industries over a variety of issues --
How the oil ministry justifies KG gas price rise
Is Reliance 'stealing' gas from ONGC's block?
Oil firms to introduce lottery system for fuel dealers
Govt calls PSU bank chiefs for performance review on May 13
Euro-IV petrol, diesel in 50 more cities by March 2015