New Delhi’s petroleum ministry is pursuing a whopping $2.81 billion (about ₹25,983 crore) from Reliance Industries and BP over accusations of siphoning gas from state-owned ONGC’s eastern offshore assets. The revelation came during parliamentary proceedings, highlighting a contentious chapter in India’s energy landscape.
State Minister Suresh Gopi addressed concerns in the Rajya Sabha, noting the claim arises from gas allegedly flowing from ONGC’s KG Basin blocks into RIL’s adjacent KG-D6 field over nearly a decade. The ministry argues this unauthorized migration netted RIL illicit gains exceeding $1.55 billion, accrued with interest.
A game-changing Delhi High Court verdict in February 2025 quashed a 2018 arbitration ruling that had cleared RIL. The division bench reversed the single judge’s stance, deeming the government’s position viable. RIL, undeterred, contests this in the Supreme Court, insisting the gas shifted naturally without fault.
Prompted by MP Deepak Prakash’s pointed questions on private firms involved and payments secured, Gopi clarified the demand targets RIL and BP specifically. As of March 2026 projections, recovery remains pending Supreme Court resolution.
This high-profile clash traces back to production-sharing contracts fraught with geological ambiguities. It raises critical questions on reservoir management, liability in shared fields, and arbitration’s role in commercial disputes. With billions at stake, the verdict could set precedents for future offshore ventures, balancing state interests against private investments.