Policy
Crude Oil Import Dependency Rises To 87.5%, Heading To 90%
more...


Election Approaches: Crude Price Crosses $90/Barrel, Marketing Companies To Absorb Losses
more...


India’s Ranking As LNG Importer To Go Up As LNG Prices Remain Low
more...


Guyana Emerges As An Oil Supplier, India Negotiates Purchase Deal
more...


India Government Pushes Small Scale LNG Units
more...

Regulation
ONGC’s FY’24 milestone: Drills 541 Wells, Reports No Oil Discovery
more...


Govt Reduces Gas Price For Reliance Industries Ltd
more...


India Initiates Construction Of First Commercial Crude Oil Strategic Storage
more...


9 Million Tonne Cauvery Basin Refinery: Cost Goes Up, IOC Raises Its Stake In JV Refinery To 75%
more...

Alternative Energy / Fuel
India’s Impressive Record In Installing Non-Fossil Fuel Capacity
more...

New Projects
Adani Total Gas commences production at Barsana Biogas Project
more...


Chhara LNG Terminal Set To Receive First Tanker
more...


Oil India Plans To Start Numaligarh Refinery By Dec 2025
more...

Market Watch
Gadkari To Get Rid Of Petrol And Diesel Vehicles?
more...

Companies
Seros Energy
more...


Shear Water Commences Survey Project
more...


OIL, GMC Signs MoU For Waste To CBG Plant
more...

Press Release [FREE Access]
Petro Intelligence » Tit-for-tat Threat Looms Over Iran Gas Deals

by R. Sasankan

Hassan RouhaniA country’s political history can turn on a set of unrelated and almost inconsequential events. For India, that moment came in the mid-eighties when the events surrounding the award of the Hazira-Bijaipur-Jagadishpur (HBJ) gas pipeline triggered momentous political developments.

The contract for this 1400 km-long, Rs 14 billion pipeline was awarded in the 1980s when Rajiv Gandhi was the Prime Minister and V.P. Singh the finance minister. The contract was decided at a remarkable speed of less than two days after the bids were opened. The tender evaluation exercise in the finance ministry, carried out in extreme secrecy, indicated that the consortium headed by Spie Capag of France was emerging as the frontrunner and Snam Progetti of Italy, which was represented in India by the controversial Ottavio Quattrochhi, was trailing. Rajiv Gandhi rang up V.P. Singh to learn that the decision had gone in favour of the Spie Capag-led consortium. “How and why”, he asked. “On the basis of the tender norms,” V.P. Singh replied. Why not change the tender norms was the next query. “Can’t be done at this stage,” Singh said. The rest as they say is history.

Narendra ModiReaders may wonder how and from where I learnt about this conversation as both the leaders are dead. I am just reproducing the text from an interview I had with V.P. Singh after he resigned from the Rajiv Gandhi cabinet. The interview was published on the front page of Indian Express for which I worked at that time.

What this episode reveals is that even in a country like India, which is not reputed to maintain a very high level of transparency in such dealings, had deep respect for tender norms. Rajiv Gandhi could have ordered a re-tender but he did not. I acknowledge that kickbacks from contracts have been a major source funds for political parties in India but the checks and balances within the system ensured that manipulations are limited and tender norms are ultimately respected.

Ali KardorI recall this incident for the benefit of my friends in India’s oil PSUs who seem to be agitated over the reported move by the Iran authorities to deny them the contract to develop the Farzad B gas field which they discovered. They have reportedly threatened to slash crude imports from Iran drastically. If that happens, it would be an unprecedented retaliation by India. The Indian government has not officially commented on the development. The possibility of such tit-for-tat retaliation was communicated through an international wire agency. Iran must have got the message.

Iran is quite unlike India when it comes to awarding contracts. A course of action that is in the best interests of Iran isn’t decided by the political leadership alone. The ruling class, which comprises the bureaucracy and senior executives of state-owned oil and gas companies, has a big say in such decisions. The public is neither involved nor interested.

Dharmendra PradhanThere is a wrong perception in India that Iran, which was a victim of debilitating sanctions by the US and Europe, will now increasingly turn to countries like India and China to boost future business relations. This springs from an insufficient understanding of the dynamics of Iran. The ruling elite of Iran has always been in love with the West, more particularly Europe; they are accustomed to the European way of life; their children study in schools and universities there and they are looked after by corporates that hope to do business with Iran. This is a more sophisticated form of kickback than the usually-known variety and its size cannot be quantified or detected. It is a continuous process. Let us not forget that the sanctions did not affect the Iranians who lived abroad. Post sanctions, the Iranian authorities will have to reward these companies. Indian PSUs do not figure in their scheme of things. Indian PSUs must learn to acknowledge this truth.

D.K. SarrafBut from the point of view of Iran’s national interest, which is very different from the interests of the ruling elite, it needs India’s vast market for oil. Farzad B is a huge gas field with in-place reserves of 18.75 TCF. True, Indian PSUs did not discover it under a Production Sharing Contract and, therefore, it is not binding on Iran to assign the development job to them. But the Indian PSUs’ rightful claims to develop the field cannot be ignored either. The Indian government and the companies, both state-owned and private companies, helped Iran during the difficult days when sanctions crippled its economy. Post sanctions, Iran replaced Saudi Arabia as the largest crude supplier to India in FY 2016-17.

The threat by Indian refiners to slash crude import from Iran drastically at this stage when Iran is crawling back to some form of economic stability, if carried out, can tantamount to a form of surgical strike. This is perfectly in tune with the Narendra Modi style of governance. Could it have been inspired by the mercantile instincts of a Gujarati or is it a deliberate move to convey India’s new sense of assertiveness that has risen in sync with its growing economic clout? The message is clear: India needs Iran only if Iran needs India. This strategy is being pursued by the Modi government in its relations with all its neighbours. Just like the surgical strike against Pakistan, Modi pooh-poohed China’s threats by visiting Arunachal Pradesh’s border with that country.

On present reckoning, Iran cannot afford to ignore Indian PSUs’ threat. But India cannot underestimate the clout of Iran’s ruling elite either. Crude exports represent Iran’s Achilles heel. The oil market is in the doldrums. Iran will come under OPEC’s production restrictions after May. And with Donald Trump in the White House, Iran may soon to have to grapple with more unpredictable outcomes.

 



To download the latest issue 'Volume 31 Issue 1 - April 10, 2024', click here
Petro Intelligence [FREE Access]
Sweet Factor Blunts Appeal Of US Crudes
more...

Greatest Uncertainty Faced By The International Oil Industry
more...

Calling The Bluff On India Busting Russian Sanctions
more...

MRPL: Asserting Its Bragging Rights
more...

Foreign Investment
Panasonic To Form JV With IOC To Make Cylindrical Lithium-Ion Batteries
more...

Overseas Investment
ONGC Gets $32 Million Payment From Venezuela’s PDVSA
more...

Gas Scene
Sectoral Consumption of Natural Gas (Qty in MMSCM) in February 2024
more...


Domestic Natural Gas Scene Presents A Bright Picture In February 2024
more...


Sector-wise Consumption Of Natural Gas
more...


Higher LNG Imports Elevate Natural Gas Consumption Level in January 2024
more...


Near Total LPG Penetration Achieved
more...


India’s Fluctuating Gas Import Dependency
more...


Gas Transportation Major GAIL’s Physical Performance
more...


Growing CGD Sales In India
more...


Domestic Natural Gas Scene In December: Targets Elude, Production, Consumption More
more...


India’s LNG Import: Import Quantity Shrinks As Prices Go Up
more...


India’s LNG Import Picks Up As Market Prices Fall
more...


Sectoral Consumption Of Natural Gas
more...


Production Targets Confuse Domestic Natural Gas Scene In November
more...


Shale Gas & Oil Eluding India
more...


Domestic Natural Gas Scene in October 2023
more...

Data Section
Monthly Upstream Data
Monthly Downstream Data
Historical database
Data Archives
Special Database
How Does BPCL’s Marketing Operations And Efficiencies Compare With Other OMCs’?
more...


OVL’s global footprints, operations and contribution
more...


Indian Crude Basket Price In March 2024
more...


HPCL’s Expansion In Refining And Marketing Infrastructure
more...


IOC’s Huge Expansion Projects
more...


Power Shortage Continues In Many Regions, Promotes Diesel Sales
more...


Analysis Of Petroleum Products Consumption Trend During FY 2023-24
more...


BPCL’s Widening Global Upstream Footprints
more...


Impressive Auto Sector Growth Pushes Up Petrol Consumption In February 2024
more...


Petroleum Products Consumption Grows 5.7 % In February 2024
more...


Import and Export of petroleum products
more...


Analysis Of Type Of Crude Oil Processed By Refineries During April-February 2023-2024
more...


Crude Import Down In February, Russian Crude Share In Cumulative Import Still Strong
more...


Sharp Reduction In GRMs Of Indian Refineries
more...


Oil Marketing Company BPCL’s Refineries Performing Remarkably Well
more...


Oil India’s 3 Major Overseas Projects
more...


BPCL Finalises Strategic Aspirations For The Next Five Years
more...


Refining Margins In Global Hubs Show Mixed Trends
more...

Tenders [FREE Access]
No content available currently