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RIL not allowing CAG audit, oil ministry tells PMO

The oil ministry has informed the Prime Minister's Office [PMO] that it has not given final nod to Reliance Industries' plans to raise natural gas output from the flagging KG-D6 fields, as the firm has refused to allow audit of its expenditure by the Comptroller and Auditor General [CAG].

The oil secretary G C Chaturvedi told a meeting convened by Pulok Chatterji, the principal secretary to the prime minister, on 24 September that KG-D6 block oversight committee, headed by the Director General of Hydrocarbons with representative of the ministry on it, has agreed to all the development proposals made by RIL, sources said here.

Chaturvedi, they said, told the meeting that finalisation of the decisions is, however, pending due to RIL's refusal to allow second round of audit by the CAG of its spending on the eastern offshore KG-D6 block.

While the management committee of KG-D6 block in August agreed to approval of capital spending plans pending for past three years, the resolution has so far not been signed. Also, at least three discoveries RIL has made in the block have so far not been declared commercial, a step necessary to begin production from them.

Besides, it had approved the revised field development plan for MA oil and gas field in the same block in August but formal orders have not been issued. All these investments, RIL says, are necessary to reverse drop in output at the fields.

Sources said Chaturvedi apprised the PMO of the status of production in the KG-DWN-98/3 or KG-D6 block and contractual issues related to it. He told the meeting that production has been continuously declining at the field since 2010-11 when it had hit a peak of 61.5 mmscmd.

Sources said that on 18 September RIL had written to the oil ministry saying it was open to financial audit of its spending on the field, which has seen production drop by over 55 per cent to 27.5 million standard cubic meters per day instead of rising to planned 80 mmscmd, but emphasised that CAG did not have powers to audit a private company.
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