Indian state oil and gas companies sign joint venture accord to develop gas field and LNG liquefaction plant

Indian state oil and gas companies sign joint venture accord to develop gas field and LNG liquefaction plant

Two Indian state-backed oil and gas companies have signed an accord to develop the Hatta natural gas field in the Vindhyan basin of Madhya Pradesh in Central India, including building an LNG liquefaction plant to supply the off-grid and transportation fuel markets.

The two companies involved are Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited (ONGC) , a company owned by India’s Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas as is its partner in the venture, Indian Oil Corp Limited (IOCL) whose activities are focused on refining petroleum products and producing petrochemicals, though both are already involved in the LNG sector.

ONGC and IOCL have signed a memorandum of understanding to establish a medium-sized LNG plant as part of the Hatta gas field development plan.

“The establishment of the Hatta LNG plant will significantly enhance the Vindhyan Basin's status,”  explained ONGC.

“The plant will utilize cutting-edge technology to produce LNG, a cleaner alternative to traditional fossil fuels, significantly reducing carbon emissions and aligning with India's climate change mitigation goals,” ONGC added.

LNG sector

ONGC has subsidiaries already involved in LNG including Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited , the owner of India’s newest LNG import facility, the Chhara terminal located in the state of Gujarat and with 5 million tonnes per annum of capacity.

Another unit, ONGC Videsh Ltd , is one of three Indian companies who share a 20 percent stake in the TotalEnergies -operated Mozambique LNG project Area 1 licence in the Rovuma Basin of the southeast African nation.  

IOCL is also involved in LNG through its ownership of the LNG import terminal at Kamarajar Port in the East Coast state of Tamil Naidu with 5 MTPA of regasification capacity.

Both ONGC and IOCL are additionally associated and founding companies of Indian’s largest LNG importer, Petronet LNG Limited which has West Coast import terminals at Dahej and Kochi.

ONGC said that the gas discovery at Hatta “represented the culmination of five decades of sustained exploration” efforts.

“ONGC has already submitted its Field Development Plan (FDP) to the Directorate General of Hydrocarbons to monetize its assets in the Hatta area,” stated the company.

The establishment of the Hatta gas field and the LNG plant will enhance the Vindhyan Basin’s status, upgrading it from a Category II to a Category I Basin.

India's sedimentary basins, covering a total area of 3.4 million square kilometres, are divided into three categories.

Category I is for basins with hydrocarbon reserves that are already producing; Category II is for resources with commercial production pending; and Category III are prospective areas where resources may be discovered.

Earnings

The submission of the Hatta gas development plan follows ONGC’s record fiscal-year net profits reported in May 2024 and amounting to 40,526 crore Indian rupees (US$4.85 billion).

However, gross annual revenues fell by over 6 percent to 643,037 crore rupees ($76.94Bln) as prices tumbled.

ONGC’s annual realised natural gas price dropped by 10.8 percent for the year to US$6.55 per million British thermal units from US$7.34 per MMBtu in the previous fiscal year.

The average crude oil price declined by 18.4 percent to US$75.91 a barrel from $93.02 per barrel in the 2022-2023 fiscal year.

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