India has approved a policy allowing extra time to contractors of old blocks to unlock oil and gas reserves of more than 426 million barrels, worth over $21 billion, as it seeks to cut its dependence on imports. The policy approved by the Cabinet will help companies including Cairn India and Oil and Natural Gas Corp that are exploring blocks awarded before 1999. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party has been taking steps to boost local oil and gas output, which had been almost stagnant for decades. India imports about 80 percent of its oil needs. Modi set a target in 2015 to cut dependence on oil imports from about by four fifths to 67 percent by 2020. During the extension period, contractors are expected to make an additional investment of more than $5.4 billion. This policy will enable the contractors to extract not only the remaining reserves but also plan to extract additional reserves by implementing new technologies.
India eases rules for old oil, gas blocks; to unlock $21 billion worth of reserves
Date posted: Thursday 23 March 2017
Tags: Featured, Policy Update