Indian gas demand hit by coronavirus surge and restrictions
Some liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargoes are being diverted away from ports in India as surging coronavirus cases there hamper domestic gas demand, trade and shipping sources have said
NEW DELHI: India‘s gas demand is being hit by state-level restrictions aimed at stemming a rampant second wave of coronavirus infections, the chief executive of Adani Total Gas Ltd said on Tuesday.
With 3.45 million active cases, India recorded 357,229 new infections over the past 24 hours, while deaths rose 3,449 for a toll of 222,408, health ministry data showed. Experts say actual numbers could be five to 10 times higher.
CEO Suresh P Manglani said that the decline in gas consumption was slower than last year when there was a nationwide lockdown. “This time some of the geographies are in lockdown, some have restricted lockdown, so we are definitely seeing some decline, not as much as last time,” Manglani said during an earnings conference call.
Adani Total, which is part-owned by French major Total, supplies gas to small industries and households in parts of the country. Manglani said gas demand has declined from all sectors – industry, households and automobiles running on compressed natural gas.
Some liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargoes are being diverted away from ports in India as surging coronavirus cases there hamper domestic gas demand, trade and shipping sources have said.
Manglani, however, said he hoped gas demand would rise as the number of infections declines and state governments gradually lift restrictions.
He said the company would be investing 12 billion-14 billions rupees ($163 million-$190 million) in this fiscal year to March 2022.
“We will evaluate this as we go forward,” he said, adding the company will accelerate its infrastructure development work in the months after state-level restrictions are lifted.