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Chawla panel critical of RIL gas contract

Chawla panel critical of RIL gas contract

The high-level Ashok Chawla Committee has criticised the system of Production Sharing Contracts like the one RIL signed for the gas-rich KG-D6 block, saying these contracts are designed to benefit private players at the government's expense.

After the CAG , the high-level Ashok Chawla Committee has criticised the system of Production Sharing Contracts like the one Reliance Industries signed for the gas-rich KG-D6 block, saying these contracts are designed to benefit private players at the government's expense.

However, the Oil Ministry rejected the criticism saying the New Exploration Licencing Policy under which Reliance bagged the KG-D6 block was designed by the BJP-led NDA government in 1999 and the terms being deplored now are ones vetted and signed by the then Atal Bihari Vajpayee government.

Read: Oil Min, DGH bent rules for RIL: CAG

Reliance bagged the KG-DWN-98/3 block in the first round of NELP, which was pioneered by the NDA government, and signed the PSC for the block in 2000. "The Congress-led UPA government first came into power in May, 2004. You don't expect contracts signed by sovereign governments to be reneged just because a different party has come into power," an official said.

Jaipal calls for open mind on CAG report

The PSCs provides for the operator to recover all capital and operating expenditure become the government's share of profit from a field rises to as high as 85 per cent.

This system gives "incentive to (an operator to) increase his investment, or front-end his work plan" in order to see that the threshold where government's profit take rises rapidly is not reached, the Chawla panel said in its report.

Oil Minister S Jaipal Reddy had on Monday indicated that the government will be open to accepting suggestions that can improve PSCs, but there are doubts if any chances in policy can be implemented with retrospective effect.

At the heart of the PSC lies the 'investment multiple', the ratio of net cash income to exploration and development costs. The investment multiple defines the share of profits that go to the government. The higher the expenditure, the lower the IM and hence, the government's share of profit.

Citing the example of KG-D6, the Chawla panel said, "The relationship between the pre-tax investment multiple (PTIM) and the share of contractor profit petroleum changes dramatically once the PTIM crosses 2.5, with the government's share increasing from 28 per cent to 85 per cent."

"It is useful to remember that this schedule is bid by the operator and not determined by the government," it said.

"A high share of some PTIM will help to win the bid, depending on the financial model of evaluation used, but it does raise concerns that such a radical change would provide very strong incentives for any operator to adopt all investment and strategies possible to ensure that the PTIM stays within the 2.5 limit," the panel report said.

The CAG, in a draft report on its audit of the KG-D6 accounts, had also criticised the current PSC structure saying it was "unsuitable for protecting the government of India's financial interests."

Published on: Jun 21, 2011, 4:20 PM IST
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