Corporate

ONGC picks up stake in South Pars field; to develop Farsi bloc

In a major breakthrough, Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) today signed agreements to pick up stake in a giant gas field and an LNG plant in Iran, which also awarded the rights to develop a gas discovery it made in the Persian Gulf two years ago. - Iran offers 40% in South Pars gas field to OVL, Hindujas - India-Myanmar gas pipleline may take shape in 2-3 yrs - GAIL buys LNG cargo for $6.65 per mmBtu - ONGC strengthens ethical practices - ONGC surges 2.62% - RIL topples ONGC as largest gas producer ONGC Videsh Ltd and Hinduja Group signed agreements to take 40 per cent interest in the $7.5 billion Phase 12 of the gigantic South Pars gas field, Iran’s Deputy Oil Minister and Managing Director of National Iranian Oil Co (NIOC) Seifollah Jashnsaz said. Also, the two, along with Petronet LNG, would get 20 per cent of Iran LNG’s project that will convert the gas from South Pars Phase-12 (SP-12) into liquefied natural gas for exports. The Indians will get up to 6 million tonnes or 60 per cent of the liquefied gas that Iran LNG will produce in return. Jashnsaz said considering the “good work” done by OVL in discovering a big gas field in the Farsi block, Iran has also decided to award it the right to develop the field. OVL, along with Indian Oil and Oil India, will invest $5-5.5 billion in developing the Farzad-B gas field. While ONGC Chairman and Managing Director R S Sharma said the distribution of stake in SP-12 between OVL and Hinduja Group was not decided, Hinduja Group Co-Chairman GP Hinduja said it would be split equally. Hinduja said in the Iran LNG project his firm would have 10 per cent and the remaining would be shared by ONGC/OVL and Petronet. Sources said Iran was seeking USD 2 billion as advance money for the projects which ONGC flatly declined. Instead, a securitisation mechanism was agreed to secure the investments made by the Indian firms. Switzerland-based Naftiran Intertrade Co (NICO), a subsidiary of NICO, will either pledge the foreign exchange reserves it has with an Indian bank or a charge would be created on the revenues that flow to Iran for the crude oil that Indian refiners import.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Shettar's followers in dilemma
BJP MLAs from North Karnataka, particularly those loyal to Assembly speaker Jagadeesh Shettar, are in a dilemma. They do not know whether to support the candidature of Shettar as an alternative leader or to continue supporting CM Yeddyurappa.
Popular Articles

Astec LifeSciences IPO price fixed at Rs 82
Agro-chemical and pharma company Astec LifeSciences today said that it has fixed the price of its initial public offer at Rs 82 per equity share, the upper end of the price band.
Polygraphy
India, Switzerland to discuss tax treaty in Nov
Amid allegations of black money being stashed in Swiss banks, India and Switzerland have advanced their talks on amending the taxation treaty by a month to the second week of November.