India, which got USD 15 billion of benefits during first 11 years of the term-contract with Qatar beginning 2003 by way of enjoying low gas prices when world energy rates were rising, will pay USD 6-7 per million British thermal unit for 7.5 million tons a year of LNG it buys from RasGas of Qatar.
"In the changed economic scenario worldwide where oil prices have slumped to multi-year lows and gas prices have fallen, India felt it should not suffer," he said, adding Petronet LNG Ltd - the firm that buys gas from RasGas, has signed a revised agreement to reflect a pricing change.
The revised formula will base the price on a three-month average figure of Brent crude oil, replacing a five-year average of a basket of crude imported by Japan, with a rider that PLL buys an additional 1 million tonnes of LNG annually.
Pradhan said Qatar will also not seek Rs 12,000 crore from PLL for 'under-lifting' LNG from RasGas by 38 per cent.
The value of the under-lifted cargoes in 2015 is Rs 12,000 crore and the new formula would suggest a USD 2.5 billion buyer saving over three years.
Pradhan said the need to renegotiate the signed contract was first raised by Prime Minister Narendra Modi when Emir of Qatar Tamim Bin Hamad Al Thani visited India in March.
PLL CEO and Managing Director Prabhat Singh said India is
the best market available for Qatar as the net back price the exporter gets is better than selling gas to Europe or Japan.
"They get the best value here. This market if you lose, you lose it for ever," he said explaining what went behind the renegotiation.
He said the fertilizer sector, which bought about one-third of the 7.5 million tons a year of liquefied natural gas (LNG) imported from Qatar, will save Rs 12-13 crore per day.
The volumes India did not take under the long-term contract as gas was available at cheaper rate in spot or current market, will be adjusted over the remaining tenure of the 25-year contract ending April 2028, he said.
The additional one million tons supplies will run concurrently with the current contract, he said.
Quantities not taken this year will be bought during the remaining term of the contract, PLL and RasGas said in a joint statement.
During the first three quarters of 2015 calendar year, PLL took 32 per cent less volumes but in the fourth quarter more users switched to cheaper supplies bought on the spot market.
The price of delivered spot LNG delivered has tumbled more than 50 per cent in the past year to about USD 6.80 per million Btus.
GAIL takes 60 per cent of the 7.5 million tons of LNG imported from Qatar while IOC takes 30 per cent. BPCL buys the remaining 10 per cent.
"RasGas Company Limited, Qatar and Petronet LNG Limited, India are pleased to announce that they have entered into a binding sale and purchase agreement (SPA) for supply of an additional 1 million ton of LNG to India starting in 2016 for onward sale to four Indian entities, i.E. IOC, BPCL, GAIL and GSPC," the statement said.
Also, the two "have entered into a binding agreement to adjust some aspects of their existing long term LNG SPA of 7.5 million tons, signed by the parties in 1999, which laid the foundation for the LNG business in India."
Supplies started in 2004.
Commenting on this event, RasGas CEO Hamad Mubarak Al-Muhannadi said "these positive developments, including the new SPA, demonstrate the strength of our long term relationship with Petronet and commitment to growing sales into India to meet its expanding clean energy needs."
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