Reliance Industries (RIL) on Thursday announced it would invest Rs 40,000 crore ($6 billion) in three projects, over three to five years, for developing discoveries in the KG-D6 block along with its 30 per cent partner BP Plc.
These discoveries are in deepwater gas fields and are expected to bring on stream 30-35 million cubic meters (1 billion cubic feet) of gas a day over 2020-22. The investment announcement comes even as the two companies are involved in arbitration with the government over pricing of natural gas.
The first project will be for R-series (D34), which will produce 12 mmscmd gas. The implementation of two other projects in Block KGD6 was subject to applicable regulatory and government approvals, the company said. RIL and BP plan to submit development plans for the next two projects for government approval before the end of 2017.
“We still have pending arbitration with the government. We will follow the normal course of the law,” Mukesh Ambani, chairman and managing director, RIL told reporters here. “We are sure that we will get a fair outcome and we don’t think it will come in the way of our investment,” he added.
The two partners will award contracts for development of the ‘R-Series’ fields soon. Since the formation of the partnership in 2011, the two companies have invested over Rs 10,000 crore ($1.6 billion) in deepwater exploration and production in the period to May 2017. Gas production from the integrated development is expected to reduce India’s import dependence by over 10 per cent in 2022.
RIL and BP will also expand their existing partnership for strategic cooperation in new opportunities across India’s energy sector.
The two companies will jointly explore options to develop differentiated fuels, mobility and advanced low-carbon energy businesses in India.
Ambani said demand for fuel was expected to grow by 5-7 percent every year over the next decade. In addition to conventional transportation and aviation fuel retailing, the companies expect to collaborate on unconventional mobility solutions, addressing electrification, digitization, and disruptive mobility trends. Together, these collaborations will seek to address the mobility needs of urban, rural/farm, industrial/commercial, and highway consumers in India, applying the leading capabilities of both partners.
Ambani said, "This strategic partnership not only strengthens the relationship between two global energy leaders but is also in line with and supports the forward-looking policies and vision of the government.” He said the two companies would also look at working together on carbon emissions trading and share knowledge around technology and management practices utilizing their unique infrastructure systems. Bob Dudley, BP group chief executive, said, “India’s demand for both energy and mobility is growing and evolving rapidly. This presents many opportunities for BP and
Reliance to build on our existing strong relationship in upstream and expand our partnership further downstream.”
On the stagnating production from KG-D6, Dudley said, "The change in policy will allow us to develop new resources just in time." BP has government permission to put up 3,500 petroleum retail outlets for which Dudley said the company would look at collaboration with RIL.
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