by admin | May 25, 2021 | Business, Commodities, Commodities News, Commodity Market, Corporate, Corporate Buzz, Economy, Investing, Large Enterprise, Markets, Medium Enterprise, News

Mukesh Ambani
Mumbai : Noting that Reliance Industries (RIL) has successfully commissioned both the world’s largest paraxylene and off-gas cracker facilities at its refinery in Jamnagar in Gujarat, Chairman Mukesh Ambani said on Thursday that the company is looking at delivering natural gas from its KG Basin offshore project by 2020.
Addressing RIL’s 41st Annual General Meeting here, Ambani said the company’s hydrocarbon business has further scaled up its capacities during the period in consideration “to become more profitable, integrated and predictable in its earnings profile”.
“We are now nearing the end of our largest-ever investment at Jamnagar and have successfully commissioned and stabilized the world’s largest paraxylene complex.
“Reliance is the second largest paraxylene (PX) producer in the world and Jamnagar has the distinction of being the largest manufacturing facility of PX in the world with 4.2 million tonne (MT) capacity,” he said.
“We also commissioned the largest off-gas cracker complex in the world. Using our refinery off-gasses as feedstock, this cracker is the most cost competitive ethylene cracker, globally.”
During 2017-18, RIL’s refining and petrochemical businesses posted record levels of profitability on the back of expanded capacities, high operating rates, improved cost competitiveness and better margins, the company reported in June.
Its refining and marketing segment posted a 3.2 per cent increase in operating profit which climbed to its highest ever level of Rs 25,869 crore (around $4 billion).
“Both the paraxylene and cracker complexes are already running substantially higher than their design capacity,” he said.
“The butyl rubber project will be commissioned later in 2018. We are also adding new high value materials like composites and carbon fibre to our portfolio,” he added.
On the exploration business, the Chairman drew attention to RIL’s joint investment plan with British energy major BP to monetise over three trillion cubic feet of gas from new fields in the Krishna Godavari (KG) basin D6 block on the eastern offshore.
“We will deploy many advanced technologies to start gas production in 2020 and reaching full production of 30-35 million standard cubic meters per day (MSCMD) by 2022,” he said.
“Our gas marketing JV (joint venture) with BP is looking for opportunities to source and distribute gas to Indian consumers including in cities,” he added.
Ambani said that RIL’s coal bed methane (CBM) gas production crossed 1 MSCMD level last year.
“We have started the second phase of CBM development to more than double the current production,” he said.
The company is proposing a cross-border merger of Reliance Holdings USA (RHUSA) with RIL to integrate the US gas resources with the Indian market, he added.
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | Economy, News
New Delhi : (IANS) The government has extended, by three months, the tenure of the A. P.Shah Committee examining the dispute over natural gas migrating from blocks of the state-run explorer ONGC in KG basin to neighbouring fields of Reliance Industries Ltd.(RIL), an official source said on Tuesday.
The source said the committee has been asked to submit by its report by July 31 on acts of “omission and commission” in the matter, and on compensation payable to the Oil and Natural Gas Corp.
The extension was necessary as RIL and its partner Niko have submitted voluminous data, said the source.
“They (the committee) sought an extension,” he said, adding that since RIL and its consortium partner Niko Resources of Canada submitted their response together with voluminous data only on February 19, the committee required more time to study these.
The government, last December, constituted a committee under Law Commission chairman A.P.Shah to recommend compensation to ONGC to protect the government interest, following the American consultant DeGolyer and MacNaughton’s (D&M) report on natural gas from ONGC’s Bay of Bengal block migrating to adjoining fields of Reliance Industries (RIL).
The committee’s terms of reference include, to “quantify the unfair enrichment, if any, to the contractors of the adjacent block KG-DWN-98/3 (KG-D6) and measures to prevent future unfair enrichment to these contractors on account of gas migration”.
The D&M report says 11.122 billion cubic meters (bcm) of ONGC gas has migrated from Godavari Producing Mining Lease PML and KG-DWN-98/2 (KG-D5) in Krishna Godavari basin to Dhirubhai-1 and 3 (D1 & D3) field located in the KG-DWN-98/3 (KG-D6) block of RIL, as the reservoirs in question are connected.
It says that of the 58.68 bcm of gas produced from KG-D6 block since April 1, 2009, 49.69 bcm belongs to RIL and 8.981 bcm could have come from the ONGC’s side.
At gas price of $4.2 per million British thermal unit, the volume of gas belonging to ONGC which RIL has produced comes out to worth $1.7 billion (Rs.11,055 crore).
ONGC had moved the high court here alleging that RIL extracted gas upto 18 billion cubic meters (bcm) from ONGC blocks, resulting in loss of several thousand crores of rupees.
In October, RIL had said it has “scrupulously followed every aspect of the production sharing contract and has confined its petroleum operations within the KG-D6 Block”.
It said all its wells were drilled “strictly within the KG-D6 block boundaries, as per the Development Plan approved by the relevant authorities under the PSC (production sharing contract)”.
D&M was jointly appointed by ONGC and RIL to investigate and submit a report on the matter.