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Cart before the horse? Oil economics before oil diplomacy

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  • Cart before the horse? Oil economics before oil diplomacy

    Financial Express, India
    June 8 2005

    Cart before the horse?

    Oil economics before oil diplomacy

    Petroleum minister Mani Shankar Aiyar's attempts to douse the
    country's energy thirst, by getting a transnational gas pipeline to
    India through Pakistan, from West Asian gas wells, is indeed
    laudable. For, few have ventured so aggressively to secure overseas
    oil and gas deals. Success could well earn him the nickname
    `Talleyrand of oil diplomacy,' a tag enjoyed by Calouste Gulbenkian,
    an Armenian billionaire deal maker, who made his mark half a century
    ago by sewing complicated oil deals across the then Turkish empire.

    However, unlike Gulbenkian, Mr Aiyar's overarching reliance on
    diplomacy borders on neglect of the economics of the deal. How else
    does one explain the recent `oil' diplomatic overtures in Pakistan by
    the minister, when the economics of the deal, including Pakistan's
    take, the transit fees, is nowhere in sight? There is no denying the
    fact that the gas pipeline deal finds critical mass in the recent
    thawing of relationship between the two countries. But the need of
    the hour is prudence. Also, basic negotiating practice demands less
    euphoria and more hard-nosed work to get the deal off the ground.
    Instead of following up astute commercial calculations with political
    manoeuvres, the opposite is being attempted. Cart before the horse,
    it appears. And, euphoria is often mistaken for desperation,
    especially in the prevailing seller's market. Transit costs matter,
    but the basic economics of the deal lies in securing a competitive
    gas producer price.

    Agreed, given the volatile global markets, predicting gas prices a
    few years from now, when supplies take place, is a difficult task.
    However, that should not, in any way, undermine the safeguards and
    best practices that need to be adopted while going about commercial
    deals. More so when, as in this case, the end consumer is nowhere in
    sight! All the more reason, then, that the procurement process is
    carefully conducted. Else, we could end with a Dabhol-like situation
    on hand, where committed capacity is required to be paid for,
    regardless of the level of offtake by the consumer.

    If the global gas markets tank a few years from now, coupled with the
    intermediary PSU oil companies (which will be buying piped gas) not
    having secured long-term supply contracts from end-consumers, we
    could end with a replay of the torturous Dabhol crisis, where
    taxpayers ended by taking a hair cut. Let the Dabhol lesson not be
    lost when Mr Aiyar moves to the next port of call, Iran, where talks
    on gas procurement take off.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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