Oil and Natural Gas Corporation has given a no-objection certificate to British oil firm Cairn Energy's sale of a majority stake in its Indian unit to Vedanta Resources, paving the way for conclusion of the $8.71-billion deal in the next few days.
ONGC, which partners Cairn India in its crown jewel oilfields in Rajasthan and seven other properties in India, has waived its preemption rights over the deal and given a no-objection certificate, sources privy to the development said.
The board of ONGC had in September agreed to waive its preemption rights if Cairn India gave a written undertaking to share royalty and pay its share of oil cess on crude oil produced from the Rajasthan fields.
ONGC, being the licencee of the Rajasthan block, pays 20 per cent royalty on not just its share of production, but also on the 70 per cent share of Cairn India.
It wanted this payment to be treated like other project costs and taxes and recouped from revenues earned from oil sales, a demand opposed by Cairn India.
Cairn India also felt the Rs 2,500 per tonne oil cess was a liability of the licencee and was opposed to deviating from the signed contract to share any of this burden.
However, the firms's current and future promoters, Cairn Energy and Vedanta, ordered it to accept the twin demands, which the government had made a precondition for giving its nod to the $8.71