No room for complacency

Explore Business Standard

| These would have a tempering effect on gas prices in the country, currently ranging from a "controlled" price of $2 per million British thermal unit (mbtu) to over $10 per mbtu for liquefied natural gas (LNG) bought in the spot market. However, the surplus situation, even if it occurs, would be a transitory situation, since excess supply would drive prices down to the level where gas demand balloons and catches up with potential supply. The lower price signal would also affect the intensity of effort to supply, which, as in the case of all hydrocarbons, is also a function of price. Factor in the (uncertain) impact of the price of competing fuels on the supply of and demand for gas, and you can be reasonably sure that any projections on gas are only indicative. |
| The last thing the country needs therefore is complacency merely because of the prospect of a temporary self-sufficiency. A rapidly growing economy is going to need more energy, and gas is a preferred fuel for a variety of reasons including from the pollution angle. There should therefore be no let-up in the search for exploration acreage and producing blocks around the world, nor in attempts to get gas into the country through transnational pipelines that may look like risky projects just now. With no clarity on what the interplay between supply-demand and price would yield in the country's gas economy "" the optimistic estimates of the XIth Plan working group project a gas surplus in the second half of the current Plan while the "normal" projections show a growing gas deficit "" it is best to hedge on supply risks rather than risk a shortage and lack of availability. |
First Published: Oct 23 2007 | 12:00 AM IST