Essar Oil to Invest Up to Rs 3,000 cr in Raniganj CBM Block

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Ruias-owned co aims to raise its contribution to India’s overall gas output to 5% within five years, says CEO

Ruias-owned Essar Oil and Gas Exploration and Production will invest up to Rs 3,000 crore in its flagship coal bed methane (CBM) block in Raniganj, West Bengal to raise gas production, a senior company executive said.

“We are determined to raise our contribution to India’s ov­erall gas output to 5% in the next five years from 1% currently. We plan to invest around Rs 3,000 crore to reach this target,” said Pankaj Kalra, CEO of Essar Oil and Gas Exploration and Production.

Kalra added that the company has an acreage of 500 square kilometer, of which it has only harnessed 70 square kilometer. “So over 80% is still to be harnessed.”

CBM is natural gas stored or absorbed in coal seams and contains 90-95% methane. According to the directorate general of hydrocarbons, India has the fifth-largest proven coal reserves in the world and, therefore, holds significant prospects for exploration and exploitation of CBM.

The Raniganj field has a total inplace resource of 4 trillion cubic feet (TCF) of gas and over the last 10 years since it started to produce, only 92 billion cubic feet (BCF) or 0.92 TCF has been extracted.

“Our recovery has not even been 2-2.5% of the resource,” said Kalra, adding that the company will drill new wells and expect that it will increase the production to almost 4 to 5million standard cubic meters of gas from the current 0.93 million standard cubic meters.

In the last two years, the company has invested more than Rs 500 crore towards the drilling of new wells.

There is also a presence of shale in the block, which is yet to be established. The company said if shale is found, it could be a game changer, not only for the company but also for the country.

The company has also signed MoUs with the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay and the University of Queensland for research and development in enhanced CBM recovery techniques and CO2 sequestration.

The company plans to extract CO2 from the neighbouring industries, like steel plants, sequester it, and put it back into the field’s dead wells for enhanced gas recovery.

Currently, the company accounts for about 65% of India’s CBM production. Other than Essar, Great Eastern Energy Corp Ltd and Reliance Industries Ltd sell CBM gas in the market.

Essar Oil and Gas Exploration and Production was carved out by the owners of Essar Group after the promoters sold Essar Oil, which mainly comprised downstream oil refinery and fuel retailing operations, to a consortium of Rosneft, Trafigura and United Capital Partners for $12.9 billion in 2017-18.

Source: The Economic Times