India prioritises cooking gas and CNG as West Asia tensions disrupt LNG supply
The allocation rejig ensures a steady supply and fair distribution of natural gas for priority sectors.
PTI
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State-owned gas utility GAIL has been tasked to manage the supplies of natural gas to implement priority order (PTI)
New Delhi, 10 March
Amid disruptions to imported gas supplies caused by the widening West Asia conflict, the government has revised the priority order for allocating domestically produced natural gas, placing LPG production alongside CNG and piped cooking gas at the top.
Under
the revised allocation, requirements of these sectors will be fully met first
before gas is supplied to other sectors, according to a gazette notification.
The
fertiliser sector has been placed in second place, with at least 70 per
cent of its past six months' demand being met.
At No.
3, gas supply to tea industries, manufacturing, and other industrial consumers
will be maintained at 80 per cent of their past six-month average gas
consumption, subject to operational availability, it said.
All city
gas distribution (CGD) entities supplying gas to industrial and
commercial consumers have been placed at No. 4 on the priority list.
Domestic
gas production, which meets about half of the country's consumption of 191
million standard cubic meters per day, will be diverted to the priority sectors
by curtailing supplies to petrochemical plants, power units, and high-priced gas
consumers.
FollowingUS-Israeli strikes inside Iran and Tehran's sweeping retaliation across the
region, maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has sharply declined,
insurance premiums have surged, and energy markets have responded with
immediate volatility. Roughly one-fifth of the world's seaborne oil and nearly
a third of global LNG shipments pass through this narrow channel linking the
Gulf to global markets.
The
artery is the conduit for the supply of most of India's imports of gas, in the form of
LNG, as well as LPG. With tanker movement being stalled, the government has
reworked domestically available gas to keep the priority segments, such as the cooking needs of households and vehicular transport, going.
Natural
gas pumped out of the ground or below sea bed is used to generate electricity,
produce fertilizer, turned into CNG to fire automobiles, and piped to households'
kitchens for cooking. It is also used to produce cooking gas LPG.
"The
Central Government has assessed that the ongoing conflict in the Middle East
has resulted in the disruption of liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments through
the Strait of Hormuz, and suppliers have invoked the force majeure clause," the
notification said, saying the supply cuts would entail diversion of natural gas
to the priority sectors.
The allocation
rejig has been done to maintain supplies and secure equitable distribution
and availability of natural gas for the priority sector.
The
supply of natural gas to "domestic piped natural gas (cooking gas supplied
to households through pipes) supply; Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) for transport,
and LPG production including LPG shrinkage requirements" shall be treated
as priority allocation and would be supplied 100 per cent of their average past
six-month gas consumption, it said.
Pipeline
compressor fuel and other essential pipeline operational requirements, too, have
been put in this priority, as without gas, the pipelines cannot function.
"The
supply of natural gas to the fertilizer plants shall ensure 70 per cent of
their past six-month average gas consumption, subject to operational
availability," it said, adding that the units shall not use the gas supply
for any other purpose except in the production of fertilizers, and the
allocation to a particular unit cannot be diverted to any other unit.
"The
gas marketing entities shall ensure that gas supply to tea industries,
manufacturing and other industrial consumers supplied through the national gas
grid is maintained at 80 per cent of their past six-month average gas
consumption, subject to operational availability," the order said, placing
the sector at No.3 priority.
All CGD
entities shall ensure that industrial and commercial consumers supplied through
their networks receive 80 per cent of their past six-month average gas
consumption, subject to operational availability.
"The
gas required to meet the priorities shall be through full or partial
curtailment of gas supplied in the following order of priority: (a)
petrochemical facilities not limited to ONGC Petrol additions Ltd, GAIL Pata
Petrochemical Complex, Reliance O2C, and other High-Pressure High Temperature
(HPHT) gas consumers; (b) power plants as required," it said.
The oil
refining companies shall absorb the impact of LNG supply disruption to the
extent feasible by reducing gas allocation to refineries to approximately 65
per cent of the past six months' gas consumption, it said.
State-owned
gas utility GAIL has been tasked to manage the supplies of natural gas to
implement priority order.
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