PETROLEUM EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION

Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) has started first crude oil production from its Cluster-2 deep-sea project in the Krishna-Godavari (KG) basin in the Bay of Bengal. 

  • A petroleum basin includes a diverse collection of rocks and sediments, but most importantly it contains source rocks.
    • Source rocks are specific shale formations in a basin where oil and gas are born. 
    • There are 26 sedimentary basins in India, covering a total area of 3.4 million square kilometer. Of the total sedimentary area, 
  • ONGC is India’s largest oil and gas producer contributing 72% of the country’s hydrocarbon production. 
  • Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH) was formed to promote sound management of the oil and natural gas resources. 
  • Approval processes have been streamlined by digitization and standardization contractual of submissions on the e-platform. 
  • National Data Repository (NDR), launched for public in 2017, serves as a government data bank promoting E&P activities. 
  • Upgrade of the NDR to a cloud-based, state-of-the art facility with virtual data rooms is in progress for investors for 24×7 access to E&P data. 
  • As per India Hydrocarbon Vision 2025, lays the broad contours/targets for the development of Hydrocarbons. 
  • 100% automatic FDI through route for exploration activities of oil and natural gas fields, infrastructure related to marketing of petroleum products and natural gas, etc.
  • National Seismic Programme (NSP) aims to undertake a fresh appraisal in all sedimentary basins across India.  
  • 3rd largest energy and oil consumer in the World
  •  33% share of Oil and gas in India’s primary energy
  • 85.7% was the import dependency of oil while for natural gas it was 48.2%.
  • Reduction in import bill: As India imports about 85% of its crude oil requirement, indigenous petroleum production will reduce trade deficit.
  • Strategic Importance: Reduces vulnerability to geopolitical uncertainties, supply disruptions, and price fluctuations in the global market.
  • Revenue generation: Indigenous petroleum production contributes to government exchequer through taxes, royalties, and profit-sharing agreements.
  • Employment Generation Jobs across a range of activities, including exploration, production, refining, and distribution.
  • HELP introduced in 2016, replaced New Exploration Licensing Policy (NELP). 
  • Provides for a Single license for E&P for all types of hydrocarbons viz. conventional oil and gas, CBM, shale oil, gas hydrates, etc. 
  • Shifted from the previous profit-sharing model to a Revenue Sharing Contract model (i.e., revenue is shared between the government and the contractor).
    • In profit-sharing model, the profit was shared after cost recovery. 
  • OALP was introduced enables investors to select blocks of their choice by evaluating data in the NDR and expressing interest. 
  • Reduced royalty rates, marketing and pricing freedom, round-the-year bidding, etc. 
  • Oil and natural gas trapped in less permeable rocks is referred to as an unconventional resource because it cannot be explored, developed and produced by conventional processes.
    • “Conventional resources” is a term referring to oil and natural gas trapped in rock that is porous and permeable.
      • The natural pressure of the underground rock formation allows oil and natural gas to flow freely up a petroleum well. 
  • These include deposits like:
    • Coalbed Methane (CBM) or Coal Seam Gas (CSG): Refers to methane rich gas naturally in coal seams typically comprising 80% to 90% methane with lower proportions of ethane, propane, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide. 
    • Shale gas/oil: It is a form of natural gas/oil that remain unexcelled, unmigrated, and entrapped within the pore space and fractures of a source rock (commonly, shale). 
    • The shale gas/oil is produced commercially when sufficient fracture conductivity is induced by hydraulic fracturing. 
    • Gas hydrates: These are naturally occurring ice-like solids (clathrates) in which water molecules trap gas molecules in deep-sea sediments and in and below the permafrost soils of the polar regions.  

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