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ONGC pares oil output target by 3.5%

NEW DELHI, Feb 24 : The country’s biggest oil and gas explorer, Oil & Natural Gas Corp (ONGC), has trimmed its crude oil output target by around 3.5% for the current financial year to end-March because of infrastructure shortages and technical issues, although the state-run firm expects production to rise next year as several new fields come on stream.

In its annual plan document for 2009-10, the company said crude oil production during 2008-09 was now expected to be 26.085 million metric tonnes (MMT) as against the earlier estimate of 27.054 MMT, hit mainly by a 0.611 MMT shortfall from its offshore assets and a 0.358 MMT shortfall from its onshore fields mainly in Gujarat.

“(The) main reasons for the shortfall...are non-availability of production infrastructure like floating production, storage and offloading vessel required for interim processing of crude, less number of development wells due to non-availability of rigs and the delay in integrated development
of...fields in the east coast,” ONGC said in the document.

But the company, in which the government owns a 74.16% stake and was the first to discover oil in India in the 1960s, has marginally increased its production target for 2009-10 by 0.865 MMT anticipating crude oil production from Bassein & satellite, Neelam & Heera, Assam, Ahmedabad and Mehsana fields.

ONGC said it expected to produce 22,248 million metric standard cubic meter (MMSCM) of natural gas in 2009-10, slightly down from a revised estimate of 22,287 MMSCM in 2008-09 but higher than its original estimate of 21,668 MMSCM for the year.

The company has also projected an increase in its initial in-place hydrocarbon reserves or the total amount of oil and gas found and the ultimate or economically recoverable reserves. It set a target of 285 million metric tonne oil equivalent (MMToe) for initial in-place hydrocarbon reserve for 2009-10, up around 2.5% on the revised estimate of 277 MMToe for the current fiscal year and around 13% higher compared with its original estimate of 251.3 MMToe.

The economically recoverable reserves for 2009-10 have been projected at 72.65 MMToe, marginally higher from the revised estimate of 72.15 MMToe in 2008-09 but significantly higher than the original estimate of 64.50 MMToe.

The report attributed the revised figures for 2008-09 to greater reserve accretion expected in the Krishna-Godavari (KG) and Assam & Assam Arakan (A&AA) basins.