The GSPC’s loans for gas exploration increased from zero to nearly Rs.20,000 crore when its own

The KG basin scam

JAIRAM RAMESH

The GSPC’s loans for gas exploration increased from zero to nearly Rs.20,000 crore when its own

estimates of reserves in the Krishna-Godavari basin kept coming down sharply

In 2005, two different business groups forayed into new ventures. One into commercial aviation, the

other into gas exploration. Both announced their entry in a grandiose manner — one with India’s largest

order of Airbus fleet, the other with India’s largest discovery of gas reserves. They had both borrowed

Rs.6,300 crore each in five years since their launch. Both business bets went awry. The airline shut down

after raking up dues of over Rs.9,000 crore to banks. The energy business is still functioning, with dues

of Rs.19,700 crore. The airline is Kingfisher Airlines and the energy business is Gujarat State Petroleum

Corporation (GSPC) and its foray into the Krishna-Godavari (KG) basin. Kingfisher Airlines and its

promoter Vijay Mallya are rightfully scorned at, deservedly stripped of their assets and reputation and

justifiably vilified. Shouldn’t GSPC be subject to similar scrutiny?

In an earlier article (“The new KG scam”, April 18), I had outlined the contours of a massive fraud in the

disguise of a business bet. Let’s be clear — businesses can take risks and can fail. Certainly, public sector

businesses fail more often. But the GSPC saga is not a mere case of a business bet turning sour. To

recap, in June 2005, then Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi made a grandiose — more grandiose

even by his standards of bombast — statement of India’s largest gas discovery in the KG basin made by

GSPC. By 2010, GSPC admitted that there was no or very little gas in the KG basin. It would have been

prudent then for any business, even a public sector undertaking (PSU), to cut down on its investments

and recoup any losses. Instead, GSPC went on a massive borrowing spree, despite its admission that

there was no gas to be found in the KG basin.

The bars in the chart show annual gas reserves of GSPC from 2005 to 2015, as estimated by the globally

renowned reservoir appraiser, Gaffney, Cline & Associates, and disclosed in GSPC’s annual reports.

Notice how since 2005, the estimated reserves have been decreasing rapidly every year. The dotted line

on the same chart shows GSPC’s loans from banks and financial institutions, for its gas exploration

activities. See how that line has increased from zero to nearly Rs.20,000 crore in this time period. When

the company’s own estimates of its gas reserves in KG basin have been coming down sharply, how was

GSPC allowed to borrow so much money every single year? Where did this money come from? And

what was it used for?

A bewildering balance sheet

A consortium of nearly 15 PSU banks lent about Rs.20,000 crore to GSPC over the past 15 years. These

banks include the State Bank of India, Vijaya Bank, Union Bank of India, Bank of India and so on.

According to the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) report of 2015, the interest costs on these

loans alone are Rs.1,800 crore per year. However, GSPC’s net income before interest in 2015 was only

Rs.80 crore. Which means it does not have enough money to pay the interest on its borrowings. So,

technically, isn’t GSPC insolvent? Should it not be declared as a defaulter by these banks? A current

Deputy Governor of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) served as a director on the board of GSPC between

2006 and 2013 and even chaired its audit committee which typically approves such borrowings. Perhaps

the RBI can ask these banks what the status of these loans to GSPC are, similar to how it has questioned

other loans to other companies.

If there was no gas to be found, then what was all this borrowed money used for? Typically when

businesses borrow for new projects or expansion, they tend to hire more workers, build more factories

etc. However, GSPC’s wage bill was constant in this time period, indicating that the company did not

hire more employees. However, a category called “Other expenses” saw a jump from Rs.16 crore in

2006 to Rs.500 crore in 2013. What these “other expenses” entailed is perhaps best left to one’s

imagination.

GSPC’s loans and advances to its subsidiary companies ballooned from Rs.18 crore in 2005 to Rs.2,000

crore in 2015 — it has various subsidiaries including joint ventures with the Adani Group. It also spent

nearly Rs.2,000 crore in buying equipment and fixed assets such as oil rigs. One such vendor that was

contracted to supply oil rigs to GSPC was a company called Tuff Drilling. Drilling in the KG basin has

proved extraordinarily tough but this delightfully named company has sailed easily. Tuff Drilling was only

incorporated in 2006 after Mr. Modi’s boast. By all accounts, its promoter had an apparel business. It

received an order in 2010 from GSPC worth several hundred crores of rupees to supply sophisticated

deep water platform rigs for gas extraction in the KG basin. Recall, this was after the realisation that

there was no or very little gas to explore in the KG basin. Tuff Drilling’s promoter is also alleged to have

been an active supporter of the Vibrant Gujarat investment summits. Suffice to say that Tuff Drilling

could not handle the transition from garments to gas and is now bankrupt.

All of this information has been put together through forensic analysis from various sources of financial

reports of the company, CAG and documents filed with various regulators in India and abroad. It is

abundantly evident that the squandering of Rs.20,000 crore of loans from banks is not a simple case of a

business bet going awry. Neither is this political vendetta.

Apologists for GSPC can couch this misadventure in technical terms of the complexity of the exploration

business or cite examples of other PSUs or private companies that have similarly failed in these energy

quests. That is not the point here. That there is a damning CAG report of GSPC malfunctioning is a fact.

That GSPC borrowed recklessly from PSU banks is indisputable. That the KG basin gas exploration

mission was a mere alibi for such borrowing is blatantly obvious from this analysis. That there are big

names involved is well known. Key officials have got lucrative post-GSPC posts. Then isn’t the right next

step a deeper, independent judicial inquiry into the sordid politically-masterminded GSPC KG basin

saga?

https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/comment-article-by-jairam-ramesh-on-the-kg-basin-scam-

part-ii/article8533360.ece