The Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH) in May-end slapped the demand notice on them, which included interest and certain other charges over a gross amount it calculated following the October 2016 final partial award (FPA), sources in the government and the PMT joint venture said.
The notice does not contain any date for making the payment or the consequences that would follow if the payment is not made, they said.
RIL and Shell had last November challenged in English court a three-member arbitration panel headed by Singapore- based lawyer Christopher Lau's FPA upholding the government view that the profit from the fields should be calculated after deducting the prevailing tax of 33 per cent and not the 50 per cent rate that existed earlier.
It also upheld that the cost recovery in the contract is fixed at USD 545 million in Tapti gas field and USD 577.5 million in Panna-Mukta oil and gas field. The two firms wanted that cost provision be raised by USD 365 million in Tapti and USD 62.5 million in Panna-Mukta.
"The way arbitration works is that the panel first gives a FPA. It then gives time to parties to dispute to file appeals and hears them. The final award is then given. In the final stage, the amount payable is quantified," a source said.
Since the judicial seat of the arbitration is at London and that the arbitration agreement is governed by the English law, any challenge to the partial award in effect puts on hold the arbitration tribunal's process.
He further added that if the court was to rule that the partial award was not good in law, the panel may decide not to scrap its earlier award and may even be wound-up.
RIL and BG Group of UK, which held 30 per cent stake each in PMT fields, had in December 2010 initiated arbitration over a dispute about recovery of cost of operations.
Shell became the operator of the field last year after taking over BG.
Neither of the companies responded to emails and calls made for comments.
"Its a partial award based on which DGH has sent demand notices," a source said.
The three-member London-based arbitration panel, to which India had named former Supreme Court judge B Sundershan Reddy as its nominee, ruled in favour of the government in some of the 69 clauses of dispute that were listed by RIL-BG combine.
A few of the clauses went in favour of RIL-BG, another source said.
Operators are allowed to deduct all costs incurred on field operations from oil and gas produced before sharing profit with the government. Disallowing of certain items in the cost would result in higher profit petroleum for the government, he said.
The official said the government also won its case for RIL-BG applying exact tax rates and not notional rates for computing statutory dues like royalty etc.
Also, it had its way on inclusion of marketing margin charged over and above the wellhead price of natural gas for calculation of royalty.
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