State-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) plans to invest $ 2.894 billion (about Rs 15,340 crore) in developing its ultra-deepsea UD-1 gas discovery in the Krishna Godavari basin by 2016-17.
ONGC believes that UD-1 gas discovery in the southern part of its Block KG-DWN-98/2 can produce for 14-15 years with peak of about 20 million cubic meters per day (mmcmd) lasting for five years, official sources said.
The company detailed the production profile and the likely investment in the revised proposal for declaring the UD-1 find as commercial (called Declaration of Commerciality).
Block KG-DWN-98/2 sits next to Reliance Industries' KG-D6 block where drop in reservoir pressure and water/sand ingress has seen output dip by over 35 per cent to just over 39 mmcmd.
UD-1 is the deepest gas discovery ever made in the country and ONGC estimates it may hold 4.257 Trillion cubic feet of inplace gas reserves, source said adding the upstream regulator, the Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH) has accepted the DOC but with lower inplace volumes of 3.938 Tcf.
Of the inplace reserves, ONGC estimates 2.55 Tcf can be recovered while DGH puts the figure at 2.315 Tcf.
Sources said ONGC plans to drill 11 wells to bring the field to production by 2016-17 with an output of 585 million cubic feet per day (16.5 mmcmd).
The production would rise to 715 mmcfd (20.24 mmcmd)
DGH, they said, found the discovery commercial after considering cumulative production of 2.315 Tcf with recovery of 58.5 per cent for 15 years.
It estimated a net present value (NPV) yield for ONGC at $ 200 million after considering $ 2.984 billion of capital investment and another $ 1.77 billion in operating expenses.
ONGC has said Development Plan at this stage of the project remains conceptual and may change based on new data.
Further as on date, there is no off-the shelf commercial production technology available with any company in the world to produce gas in such deep waters (2,841 meters), sources said adding ONGC believes that technological solutions would be available in next three years.
The block KG-DWN-98/2 is divided into two Northern Discovery Area and the Southern Discovery Area. The northern part has nine discoveries - Padmavati, Kanakdurga, N-1, R-1 (Annapurna), E-1, A1, U1, W1 and D-1/KT-1. The southern part holds the UD-1 discovery at a record depth of 2,841 metres.