Clearly, Sibal had decided to take on the ONGC top brass. But he ended up on the losing side as his superiors in the government overruled him. On November 23, at a meeting of the empowered committee of secretaries (ECS) headed by petroleum secretary M.S. Srinivasan and comprising representatives of the two ministries of finance and law, Sibal's suggestions were rejected.
This happened after ONGC screamed blue murder as soon as it learnt about Sibal's suggestions. ONGC's CMD R.S. Sharma met Srinivasan a day before the ECS meeting and complained about the discriminatory attitude of the DGH. Sharma pointed out that if ONGC's past record in exploration was as pathetic as Sibal had made it out to be, why was the company allowed to participate in the bidding process in the first place?
A senior bureaucrat says that if the DGH's recommendations had been accepted by the ECS, it "would have been tantamount to changing the rules of the game after the game had begun, which would have attracted the attention of not just the Comptroller and Auditor General of India but Parliament as well—it would have blown up in our face." Srinivasan obliquely hinted that Sibal's contentions were untrue, and that ONGC was on the 'verge' of major discoveries in the near future.
After the ECS meeting, it's certain the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) will approve the awarding of the bids for the 12 blocks to ONGC. But the cold war between Sibal and Sharma is not over. Official sources claim the DGH is trying to convince the ministry to change some of the rules for the next rounds of bidding under NELP, which may bar the national oil firm from participating in them for a few years.
This is not the first time the petrocrats have taken up cudgels against ONGC. Former ONGC CMD Subir Raha had differences with former minister Mani Shankar Aiyar, senior bureaucrats and the DGH. This is not the first time the DGH has criticised ONGC's exploration track record. On the day of ONGC's annual general meeting this year, the DGH placed an advertisement trashing the company's record in finding oil and gas under NELP rounds. It stated that ONGC's performance compared poorly with those of private companies like Reliance and Cairn Energy.
Sibal has a point. Until March 2005, ONGC had been awarded 47 blocks under MELP and pre-NELP regimes; it agreed to drill 78 wells and explored 13 with a zero success rate. Only in 2006 did it strike gas in three blocks which, says the DGH, "is under evaluation by operators". In the past three years, ONGC has announced 60-70 discoveries—most in nomination blocks given to it without competition—but they haven't been 'validated' by either the DGH or other government departments.
ONGC sources counter the DGH's contentions by putting out different sets of statistics. The sources add that if ONGC's exploration record in non-NELP blocks is taken into account, its 'success ratio' at 42 per cent between 2001-02 and 2005-06 (or 269 out of 638 wells drilled) compares well with those of Reliance (47 per cent) and Cairn (37 per cent). Further, ONGC claims Sibal has been 'rather selective' in putting out data.
One report of the DGH stated that during 2004-05, ONGC discovered 137 million tonnes of 'initial in-place' reserves of oil and gas while the private sector as a whole discovered 180 million tonnes. The situation reversed the following year, 2005-06, when ONGC added 137 million tonnes to reserves against 66 million tonnes by the private sector. These reserves are incidentally not the ones claimed by individual companies in their publicity material, but reserves certified by the DGH.
It is not as if ONGC's performance should not be criticised. After all, its total production of crude fell from 26.7 to 24.4 million tonnes between 2004-05 and 2005-06. What ONGC officials are unhappy about is that a wing of the government has been 'patently' unfair in its criticism of one of the biggest companies of its kind in the world and a navratna. "We are not above criticism, but don't try and throttle our growth by unfairly denying us contracts that are legitimately due to us," says an ONGC official.
However, Sibal has a bigger problem with ONGC. He feels exploration has taken a backseat at the oil behemoth in the past 4-5 years. There's no accountability about fresh discoveries, and this is hindering competition under NELP. Sources say ONGC is 'very aggressive' while bidding alone as it isn't under pressure to show results and, therefore, shuts out competitors. That's why when it bid together with the more conservative foreign partners (British Gas and BP) in NELP-VI, it lost out.
So, Sibal wants a level playing field where private domestic and foreign majors, who're more aggressive in drilling wells to find new discoveries, are able to grab more blocks. In addition, he thinks ONGC is 'degrading' a few lucrative exploratory areas as foreign investors tend to take ONGC's failure there as a benchmark to ignore them. The way out was to disallow the awarding of some of the blocks under NELP-VI to ONGC. And now was the time to invoke the "past performance" clause, which has been a part of the bid evaluation criteria (BEC), under NELP-VI
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