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Oil and Gas Forum

February 22, 2010

RIL fully cooperating with audit: CAG

The Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) has stated that Reliance Industries is providing full access to records and making available copies of documents it has sought for audit of expenses incurred on the nation's largest gas field. 

CAG, which started audit of the Krishna Godavari basin D6 field on December 21, after completing the first round of scrutiny sought a completely new set of documents and access to RIL's entire corporate SAP (computer-based accounts). 

However, since the documents and the photocopies of records sought ran into thousands of pages, there was a delay, prompting CAG to shoot off a complain to the Oil Ministry. 

Within weeks of the January 27 complaint, CAG has again written to the Petroleum Ministry saying it has made progress in receipt of requisitioned documents as well as their copies. 

"There has been progress both in receipt of requisitioned documents as well as in making photocopies," CAG Principal Director of Audit K R Sriram wrote on February 12. Since, the entire RIL is not being audited by CAG, segregating records pertaining to on the KG-D6 fields was taking time. 

CAG's scope of audit of PSC in respect of the block KG-DWN-98/3 (KG-D6) awarded to RIL, for two financial years - 2006-07 and 2007-08, with access to records of previous years linked to transactions of these years. 

It is also understood that scope of this audit will far exceed the normal course of audit by CAG and the prime objective may be to detect fraud, if any, by the operator (RIL) allegedly in collusion with the oil regulator DGH and Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas

Sources said while the ministry wanted special audit of accounts from 2003-04 fiscal, CAG wanted scope of examination of records be restricted to 2006-07 and 2007-08 only. 

The government in 2002 asked CAG to audit PSCs like the one for KG-D6 block with RIL, but the premier auditor had then stated that its charter neither permitted audit of private accounts nor did it have the manpower to do so. 

Subsequently, the government with the concurrence of CAG, appointed independent third-party auditors on the basis of an open bidding process. These auditors have audited accounts of companies like RIL

However, in 2007, CAG was asked to audit the exploration spending and the agency conducted audit of all the private company reports, copies of which were available with the DGH. To close the audit, they needed to seek originals, which have now be made available to them, they said.

Source: Economic Times
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