India seeks better LNG deal by teaming up with South Korea and Japan

India
India is looking to form a network of suppliers to provide a reliable and affordable source of LNG for the energy-hungry country. World Maritime News photo.

Natural gas imports by India have risen by 335 per cent since 2006

By Promit Mukherjee

MUMBAI, June 14 (Reuters) – Energy-hungry India has restarted talks on a liquefied natural gas (LNG) purchasing alliance with Japan and South Korea and may also include China as Asian demand for the fuel grows.

“For the next two to three decades, gas is going to be a major part of the energy basket for Asian energy consumers,” Dharmendra Pradhan, Indian Minister of Petroleum and Natural Gas told reporters in Mumbai on Tuesday.

“We want to bring together the countries and form a network which can together source reasonable, rational and affordable LNG,” he said, adding that talks with Japan and South Korea have begun and China may also come onboard as a partner.

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State-owned GAIL Ltd is spearheading the talks, which follow a similar attempt in 2013, on the country’s behalf.

Natural gas currently accounts for about 8 percent of India’s overall energy mix. In the last decade, while India’s domestic natural gas production has grown by 10 percent, imports of LNG have risen by 335 percent.

This is likely to grow further as India gradually shifts to an oil-based economy, the minister told Reuters in a recent interview.

Indian gas demand stands at 120 million standard cubic meters per day (mscmd) whereas domestic supply is 80 mscmd, making imports imperative, government data showed.

(Editing by Alison Williams and Alexander Smith)