OIL and Natural Gas Corp. (ONGC) hopes to increase gas production by nearly 30 percent over the next three-four years with an investment of around $11 billion, a financial daily quoted a senior officials as saying. ONGC will put its blocks in the Krishna Godavari basin (KG-DWN-98/2) and Ratna and R-Series oilfields in Mumbai offshore into...
production by 2019. The coal bed methane (CBM) blocks in Jharkhand will begin production by 2020, while the Daman offshore fields, which have been pressed into production this month, will be ramped up next year.
“Our production has been stagnant but some discoveries are in the pipeline. In the next three-four years gas production for ONGC should be up by 30%,” the first ONGC official cited above said on condition of anonymity.
While KG-DWN-98/2 will be pushed into production by 2019, Daman will begin production shortly and be ramped up by 2018.
ONGC produces around 23 billion cubic metres (bcm) of gas a year, which is expected to go up to 29-30 bcm in four years. However, gas production at some existing fields is projected to drop to 11.8 bcm in four years from the current 19.73 bcm.
Since production from the existing fields is declining, some part of the fresh gas production would go toward compensating that loss.
It plans to develop KG-DWN-98/2 in three clusters, said the first official cited above.
The ONGC board last month approved the field development plan for fields falling under Cluster II, the first cluster to be developed. The development will involve a capital expenditure of $5.08 billion, ONGC said in a statement on its website. Cluster II will produce its first gas by June 2019, according to the statement.
The Ratna and R-series fields will be put to production from 2019. The fields were returned to ONGC last March, 22 years after they were awarded to Essar Oil. The Ratna and R-series oil fields hold an estimated 87 million barrels of oil and 1.2 bcm of gas reserves.
Last fiscal, ONGC drilled 501 wells against 386 in 2015-16. The second official quoted above said the company has achieved this number for the first time in more than two decades. “Success of drilling will ensure establishment of newer resources and augment production,” he added. ONGC spent Rs15,747 crore in drilling these wells.
The Daman offshore project, which will begin production from this month end or early next month, will contribute around 2 to 3 million metric standard cubic metres per day (mmscmd) of gas from May.
ONGC has also started work on its coal bed methane (CBM) project. Methane is a form of natural gas extracted from coal beds. ONGC holds four CBM blocks. Two—North Karanpura and Bokaro in Jharkhand—will start production by the second half of 2017-18. Production after the development of all four blocks is estimated to be about 1.7 mmscmd.
The Maharatna PSU has sold a 25 percent stake in its North Karanpura CBM block to Prabha Energy Pvt. Ltd, a unit of Deep Industries Ltd. The block in Bokaro will be developed by ONGC.
The explorer also plans to begin work shortly on the high-pressure high temperature Deen Dayal West field in which it acquired 80% from Gujarat State Petroleum Corp. this February for $1.2 billion.
production by 2019. The coal bed methane (CBM) blocks in Jharkhand will begin production by 2020, while the Daman offshore fields, which have been pressed into production this month, will be ramped up next year.
“Our production has been stagnant but some discoveries are in the pipeline. In the next three-four years gas production for ONGC should be up by 30%,” the first ONGC official cited above said on condition of anonymity.
While KG-DWN-98/2 will be pushed into production by 2019, Daman will begin production shortly and be ramped up by 2018.
ONGC produces around 23 billion cubic metres (bcm) of gas a year, which is expected to go up to 29-30 bcm in four years. However, gas production at some existing fields is projected to drop to 11.8 bcm in four years from the current 19.73 bcm.
Since production from the existing fields is declining, some part of the fresh gas production would go toward compensating that loss.
It plans to develop KG-DWN-98/2 in three clusters, said the first official cited above.
The ONGC board last month approved the field development plan for fields falling under Cluster II, the first cluster to be developed. The development will involve a capital expenditure of $5.08 billion, ONGC said in a statement on its website. Cluster II will produce its first gas by June 2019, according to the statement.
The Ratna and R-series fields will be put to production from 2019. The fields were returned to ONGC last March, 22 years after they were awarded to Essar Oil. The Ratna and R-series oil fields hold an estimated 87 million barrels of oil and 1.2 bcm of gas reserves.
Last fiscal, ONGC drilled 501 wells against 386 in 2015-16. The second official quoted above said the company has achieved this number for the first time in more than two decades. “Success of drilling will ensure establishment of newer resources and augment production,” he added. ONGC spent Rs15,747 crore in drilling these wells.
The Daman offshore project, which will begin production from this month end or early next month, will contribute around 2 to 3 million metric standard cubic metres per day (mmscmd) of gas from May.
ONGC has also started work on its coal bed methane (CBM) project. Methane is a form of natural gas extracted from coal beds. ONGC holds four CBM blocks. Two—North Karanpura and Bokaro in Jharkhand—will start production by the second half of 2017-18. Production after the development of all four blocks is estimated to be about 1.7 mmscmd.
The Maharatna PSU has sold a 25 percent stake in its North Karanpura CBM block to Prabha Energy Pvt. Ltd, a unit of Deep Industries Ltd. The block in Bokaro will be developed by ONGC.
The explorer also plans to begin work shortly on the high-pressure high temperature Deen Dayal West field in which it acquired 80% from Gujarat State Petroleum Corp. this February for $1.2 billion.
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