Report Ongc
Report Ongc
SCOPE OF STUDY
Our study will basically focus on studying an Indian company
which has made a foray into the international markets recently and
is emerging as a global MNC. The project would focus on the
various strategies that the company is following to gain a
competitive advantage in the foreign country and what all
problems the company in facing in the foreign country and how
these problems can be overcome and to study the companys
multinational central management.
METHODOLOGY OF STUDY
The methodology that we would be following would include:
(1) Collecting information about the company from various
resources like companys website, books, journals, databases and
from few company officials, if possible.
(2) Analyzing the data collected using qualitative as well
quantitative techniques.
(3) Presenting the various findings of the project.
(4) Making certain recommendations to the company.
INTRODUCTION
During the pre-independence period, the Assam Oil Company in
the northeastern and Attock Oil company in northwestern part of
the undivided India were the only oil companies producing oil in
the country, with minimal exploration input. The major part of
Indian sedimentary basins was deemed to be unfit for development
of oil and gas resources.
After independence,
the national
Government
realized the
importance oil and gas for rapid industrial development and its
strategic role in defense. Consequently, while framing the
Industrial Policy Statement of 1948, the development of petroleum
industry in the country was considered to be of utmost necessity.
Until 1955, private oil companies mainly carried out exploration of
hydrocarbon resources of India.
In Assam, the Assam Oil Company was producing oil at Digboi
(discovered in 1889) and the Oil India Ltd. (a 50% joint venture
between Government of India and Burmah Oil Company) was
engaged in developing two newly discovered large fields
Naharkatiya and Moran in Assam.
On
31
March
2013,
its market
second
largest
publicly
traded
making
it
company.[3][4] In
of
Oil
Marketing
Companies
ONGC's
operations
include
conventional
exploration
and
SUBSIDIARIES
ONGC Videsh:
Cuba (Block N-25, N-26, N-27, N-28, N-29 N-34, N-35 &
N-36 Block)
The perceptions about ONGC began to change for the better after
it was given a status of Corporation in 1994 under the Companies'
Act. Now the sentiment has peaked in its favour to new heights. R.
Kanan, general manager, Oil & Petrochemicals, ICICI Ltd, enlists
the factors that have contributed to this change. "The dismantling
of APM in April this year, ONGC's recent successes in acquisition
of stake in Sakhalin I in Russia, gas prospects in Vietnam - where
it has 45 per cent stake in the joint venture (JV) and most
importantly its launch of Mumbai High redevelopment plan are the
positive developments favouring ONGC's prospects in near
future," he says. There are many others who share his optimism.
For example, an encouraging trend in ONGC'S crude and gas
production in the current year has not escaped analysts' notice.
"Production of oil and gas for the first quarter in this year,
encouragingly, increased year-on-year by an estimated 8.5 per cent
and 6.1 per cent, respectively," reports Equity Master, a website.
After going through a decade of uncertainty, this reassessment
must come as a great relief to all concerned in ONGC.
- Use seismic data and well logs for making forecast of exploitable
reserves
- Using these forecasts suggest Mumbai High redevelopment plan
.Acknowledging the in-house capabilities of ONGC scientists and
engineers, GCA, constituted a multi-disciplinary team made up of
ONGC personnel. It limited itself to a role of facilitator. Both the
teams submitted their report in 2001 to the ONGC board. This is as
far as what it did concerning its malfunctioning assets. But, the
Corporation was also suffering from the organisational atrophy. To
correct this ONGC appointed McKinsey in 1997.
McKinsey's mandate was to evolve an organisational structure that
was far more responsive to its business needs than that based on
business groups. "Almost every proposal originating in the field
required 15 to 20 signatures. The files shifted too and fro in the
earlier system between functional heads at the headquarters," says
Raha. It often meant delays exceeding a year in matters requiring
urgent decisions on fields. Also, since responsibilities were shared
at production platforms between different business groups, the
system degenerated into wrangling over responsibilities. Similarly,
group loyalties often took precedence over the requirements of
tasks. But, most importantly, it was found that the performance
in
its
presentation
titled
'Organisation
Transformation Project'.
When Raha took charge in May 2001, it was time to act and take
things forward. All of the reports were in. Pilots at Neelam and
Mumbai High had proved successful. Besides, 'Navratna' status
earned in April 1999 had given the management substantial leeway
to evolve and put together its own strategies. However, several
inconsistencies in Mckinsey recommendations needed ironing-out
before the experience acquired from the pilots in Neelam and
Western offshore could be moulded into a larger strategic plan.
Though Mckinsey recommendations were broadly accepted,
coordination issues concerning commonly-shared services (such as
who should drilling personnel working at asset site report to? A
functional or an asset head?) needed to be sorted out.
and
benchmarked
the
globally-
established
accumulation of hydrocarbons. It has now prioritised four deepwater projects for drilling in Kutch, Kerala-Konkan, KrishnaGodavary and Cauvery basins. It will be drilling in all 47 wells
in these basins. Overall, the drilling activity has risen sharply in
recent years (see chart). Meanwhile a sizable gas discovery has
been made in Daman. Initial estimates suggest reserves in the
range of 30 to 50 million cubic feet. This could grow as new
exploratory data comes in.
oil
major
in
no
time.
The above diagram shows the various parts of the world where
OVL operates. Most are oil exploration blocks but OVL produces
oil at their Vietnam and Sudan projects. Their production has been
on an increase.
NEW BUSINESSES
ONGC has also ventured into Coal Bed Methane (CBM) and
Underground Coal Gasification (UCG);
CBM production would commence in 2006-07 and UCG in
2008-09
ONGC is also looking at Gas Hydrates, as it is one possible
source that could make India self-sufficient in energy.
Started the Sagar Sammriddhi project, a deep water oil
extraction project, at par with the best in the world.
The new project has a daily cost of $0.75 million.
Aims to dig wells, some as deep as 3 kms.
COMPTETIVE STRENGTH
All crudes are sweet and most (76%) are light, with sulphur
percentage ranging from 0.02-0.10, API gravity ranging from
26-46 and hence attracts a premium in the market.
Strong intellectual property base, information, knowledge,
skills and experience.
Maximum number of Exploration Licenses, including
competitive NELP rounds.
ONGC owns and operates more than 11000 kilometers of
pipelines in India, including nearly 3200 kilometers of subsea pipelines. No other company in India, operates even 50
per cent of this route length.
LEVERAGING TECHNOLOGY
To attain the strategic objective of improving the Recovery Factor
from 28 per cent to 40 per cent, ONGC has focused on prudent
reservoir management as well as effective implementation of
technologies for incremental recovery to maximize production
over the entire life cycle of existing field
Improved Oil Recovery (IOR) and Enhanced Oil Recovery
(EOR) schemes are being implemented:
In 15 fields including Mumbai offshore
At a total investment exceeding US $2.5 billion.
Yielding incremental 120 MMT of O+OEG over 20 years
to
reach
out
further
has
adopted
Best-in-class
business
practices
for
investment
of
around
US
125
million.
Onshore
Production Installation :- 225
Pipeline Network (km) :- 7900
Major Offshore Terminals (including CFU, LPG, Gas, Sweetening
plants, Storage Tanks) :- 2
Drilling Rigs :- 75
Work Over rigs :- 66
Seismic Units :- 33
Logging
Units
:-
35
Offshore
Well Platforms :- 131
Well-cum-Process Platforms :- 5
Process Platforms :- 28
Drilling/ Jack-up-Rigs :- 18
Pipeline Networks (km) :- 3200
Offshore Supply Vessels :- 32
Special Application Vessels :- 4
OPPORTUNITIES
New oil blocks in the Cuba & other Latin American
Companies.
Contribute 60 MMTPA by the year 2025 by using state of the
art technology and soliciting tenders in new regions to
explore oil and gas.
Foray into retailing by launching OVal, fuel dispensing
stations at Mangalore.
Tie up with SHELL Bitumen co. for manufacturing
petroleum products in India.
Launched Mangalore SEZ to envisage an investment of
35000 cr.
Under the Mangalore SEZ plan it aims to build a Gasification
plant, oil refinery, development of part of the Mangalore port
etc.
Foster tie ups with other Indian companies like GAIL, OIL
etc. to jointly explore and extract oil & gas in India & abroad.
technological
expertise
must be
improved.
A latest threat has emerged from the proximity of the
Russian Energy Ministry, which controls the Yugansk
oil fields, with the Chinese National Petroleum Corp.
RECOMMENDATIONS
Aggressively lookout for new oil blocks so that
Reserve Replacement to Production Ratio stays high.
Affect an overall organisational restructuring i.e.,
vertical
to
horizontal
to
facilitate
faster
communication
Pick up stakes in regional oil blocks like the Yugansk
oil fields in Russia.
Keep upgrading technology to have an edge over
regional players.
Increase recovery from a low 28% to 40-50%.
Increase presence in the fuel retailing business by
opening more pumps all over India
Form joint ventures with local companies to explore
oil in India.
KEY LEARNINGS