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Rediff.com  » Business » BP disaster will change much in India too

BP disaster will change much in India too

By Jyoti Mukul & Kalpana Pathak
June 03, 2010 11:41 IST
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The BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has sent Indian oil majors into a review mode. While private sector Reliance Industries Ltd is reviewing its service contracts and engineering operations, government-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corporation has conducted five safety audits for its field since the incident happened on April 20.
 
The London-based company lost around 15 per cent of its market value in a single day on Wednesday, taking the total decline to 40 per cent or $74 billion from $186 billion since the disaster. Domestic oil industry in India is now debating the risk taking ability of companies especially that of mid-size players.
 
A paradigm shift in the risk sharing by the operator and the service provider is also on the anvil. The responsibility for safe conduct of drilling and production operation is that of the field operator since the lease for drilling is in its name.

"We generally take insurance for such incidents and even the service provider takes insurance but the primary responsibility is of the operator. We are now looking at technical and certain aspects of service contracts," said PMS Prasad, director and head (petroleum business), RIL.
 
He said the incident would have far reaching implications for operators and service providers and their insurance contracts. Besides technical aspects like hardware, design and cementation of wells would also need to be reviewed.
 
There may be a change in relationship between the operating companies and service providers who conduct the actual drilling, cementing and provide hardware for the entire operations right from exploration to the production stage. Certain liability clauses may now be built into contracts with service providers.

"This will be a game changer. We feel that the approval process from regulatory authority, not only in the US but elsewhere also, is going to be much more difficult and demanding. The companies will be required to spend much more resources towards safety precautions and drilling practices will be more stringent," said ONGC Chairman R S Sharma.
 
The US president Barack Obama has announced that his government would freeze offshore drilling projects for six months and suspend exploration underway near Alaska, Virginia and in 33 sites in the Gulf of Mexico.
 
The future of India's deepwater drilling would also be redefined though the country cannot afford such a moratorium, said Avinash Chandra, former, director general of hydrocarbons. About two-third of India's domestic crude oil production of about 34 million tonne comes from offshore fields. "We are heavily dependent on imports so work has to go on (for domestic exploration and production) in line with new safety precautions," he said.

Image: Oil continues to flow as technicians attempt a repair at the site of the Deepwater Horizon oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico in this video grab taken from a BP live video feed June 1, 2010. | Photograph: Reuters

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Jyoti Mukul & Kalpana Pathak
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