ONGC exits Trinidad and Tobago gas block
Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) has been forced to exit from a gas block in Trinidad and Tobago after its
partner Lakshmi N. Mittal walked out of the project.
ONGC-Mittal Energy (OMEL) -- the joint venture of ONGC Videsh and Mittal Investment -- had in 2007 won the offshore
block North Coast Marine Area-2 (NCMA-2), that is estimated to hold in-place reserves of 2 tcf, beating Britain's
Centrica. But last year, Mittal Investment Sarl (MIS) decided to exit the project possibly because of global economic
downturn.
"When we had bid for the block in Trinidad and Tobago, we had consciously decided not to take more than 51 % stake.
After the exit of MIS we had the option of doing the project entirely on our own but that did not fit into our scheme
of things," an OVL official said.
OMEL had 65 % interest in the block while Trinidad and Tobago's state-owned oil firm Petrotrin had the remaining.
Under the initial agreement, OMEL was required to carry Petrotrin during the exploration phase (OMEL contributing
Petrotrin's share of investment).
After the exit of MIS, OVL -- the overseas investment arm of ONGC -- would have to foot the entire $ 304 mm
exploration expenditure with Petrotrin not willing to share any risk.
"We tried to get an international energy firm as partner but did not succeed so we had no option but to exit the
block," he said. OMEL had also committed to pay a signature bonus of $ 30.1 mm for the acreage, but this was never
paid as the Production Sharing Contract (PSC) was not concluded.
NCMA-2 was considered OMEL's second-biggest success after Nigeria where the joint venture had acquired two
exploration areas. Mittal had identified Trinidad and Tobago as one of the eight priority nations for pursuing oil
and gas opportunities exclusively with ONGC. But offlate, it has started exiting most of the investments, including a
prospective Satpayev oilfield OMEL got in Kazakhstan.
ONGC and Mittal had in July 2005 signed a joint venture agreement for acquisition of oil andgas fields, refinery
business and LNG projects in 27 countries. The agreement had classified target countries into Schedule-I and II.
Mittal and ONGC had agreed to participate on an exclusive basis through OMEL in Schedule-I countries such as Angola,
Azerbaijan, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Romania, Trinidad and Tobago, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.
In Schedule-II countries of Bosnia, Canada, China, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Kyrgyzstan, Liberia, Sudan,
Macedonia, Mexico, Nigeria, Poland, South Africa, UK and the US, the two partners agreed to bid jointly on a
case-to-case basis.
