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Large consumers may pay higher rates for RLNG

By Khaleeq Kiani 2017-03-13
ISLAMABAD: The government is considering restructuring the natural gas tariff to provide imported re-gasified liguefied natural gas (RLNG) to large domestic consumers at significantly higher rates.

A senior government of ficial told Dawn that the Directorate General of Gas a policy wing of the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Resources would be sending a formal summary to the upcoming meeting of the federal cabinet to include domestic consumers in the highest slab of natural gas consumers among recipients of RLNG.

Presently, domestic consumers using more than 300 cubic metres of natural gas per month are charged at a rate of about Rs700 per unit compared to less than Rs280 per unit for consumers using less than 300 cubic meters a month.

In contrast, RLNG is currently priced at about Rs1,000 or above per unit. That would mean the price for large domestic consumers could be increased by 40pc for the purpose of price parity with CNG, industry, fertiliser and power sector.

Currently, RLNG is being provided to the fertiliser, industrial, power and transport sectors because of limited imports.

But RLNG users will increase as the government ramps up imports with additional LNG terminals coming up.

The government is aiming for increased LNG imports from the current 400-500 million cubic feet per day (MMCFD) to almost two billion cubic feet per day by the next year as fresh terminals will begin coming online from July this year.

The of ficial said the idea was to extend RLNG supplies to all those who can afforditbymaking theimported product a part of domestic gas through weightedaverage cost of gas, while protecting lower and middle-income consumers from a major price hike.

The move is aimed at improving cash flows of gas utilities giving a policy signal to richer consumers to opt for alternate fuel if they cannot control their consumption. `They should not have unlimited access to a scarce resource at subsidised rates,` the of ficial explained.

Supply of domestic gas to utilities has been declining, hampering their revenue growth. There may well come a stage when the companies are unable to sustain their operations.

As a consequence, RLNG would be replacing domestic gas as the major source of supply and revenue growth for gas companies.

Officials said the RLNG was originally ring-fenced by the government for supplies to large consumers like industry and power to protect domestic consumers from a price shock. However, the tariff for lower and middle class consumers with a monthly consumption of less than 300 cubic metres would be kept generally stable, because of politico-economic considerations.

The government had reduced gas prices for industrial consumers by 33pc in November last year, but then reversed the decision a month later.

Instead, the reduction in gas rates was diverted to the power generation sector including public-sector power plants and independent power producers (IPPs) to give some relief to the textile industry in Punjab.

Industries in Punjab, particularly the textiles, have been advising the government to merge RLNG with locally-produced natural gas to reach a weighted average cost of gas to provide uniform pricing to industries across the country.

The industrialists in Punjab have been demanding that gas price imbalance should be removed on the pattern of electricity rates that attracted tarif f rationalisation surcharge on all consumers to ensure unified electricity rates across the country.

It has been argued that the proposed gas price equalisation solution does not attract the ambit of Article 158 of the Constitution which `protects only the first right to use of gas in a province, but does not limit or state how this price should be determined`.