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Home > News > India News > Article > Oil strike halts natural gas supply to industries

Oil strike halts natural gas supply to industries

Updated on: 07 January,2009 11:54 AM IST  | 
PTI |

Defying High Court orders, oil PSU executives on Wednesday stopped work forcing stoppage of natural gas supplies to industries on the nation's main trunk pipeline but aviation services and fuel supplies continued to be normal.

Oil strike halts natural gas supply to industries

Defying High Court orders, oil PSU executives on Wednesday stopped work forcing stoppage of natural gas supplies to industries on the nation's main trunk pipeline but aviation services and fuel supplies continued to be normal.



"The strike is total in all oil PSUs except Hindustan Petroleum. The strike began at 0600 hours," Oil Sector Officers' Association (OSOA) President Amit Kumar said here.



Officers of Oil and Natural Gas Corp stopped natural gas supplies from the country's largest field in Mumbai offshore, forcing a shutdown of the Hazira-Vijaipur-Jagdishpur pipeline.



"Gas supply pressure from ONGC fields started reducing from 0230 hours and came to a grinding halt at 0600 hours, forcing us to cut supplies on HVJ," GAIL Chairman UD Choubey said.


"GAIL is maintaining supplies to priority sector from the volumes already available in the pipeline." ONGC also stopped most of the gas supplies from privately operated Panna/Mukta and Tapti fields as the fuel from these passes through its processing units and pipelines.


Only 1.5 million standard cubic meters per day out of 18 mmscmd was being supplied. The strike was most visible in ONGC, Amit Kumar's parent firm, while it has no impact in HPCL.


Indian Oil Corp, the nation's largest refiner, was maintaining aviation services but operations at four of its refineries were impacted.


"Aviation services are working normally. Our petrol pumps are also operating normally," IOC Chairman Sarthak Behuria said. But Haldia refinery has taken a complete shutdown while its Panipat, Mathura and Koyali refineries was under 'cooling down' - a process before the units are completely shutdown.


"In Haldia, all units are being shutdown but at the other three refineries some units will continue to operate," a company official said.


Govt to review impact of strike


Petroleum Minister Murli Deora will review the situation arising out of the strike by the executives of oil PSUs this afternoon.


"I have called a meeting this afternoon to assess the impact," Deora told reporters here.

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