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India aims to increase hydrocarbons exploration acreage to 1 million sq km by 2030: Hardeep Puri
India aims to increase hydrocarbons exploration acreage to 1 million sq km by 2030: Hardeep Puri

India Gazette

time09-07-2025

  • Business
  • India Gazette

India aims to increase hydrocarbons exploration acreage to 1 million sq km by 2030: Hardeep Puri

Vienna [Austria], July 9 (ANI): India aims to increase its hydrocarbons exploration acreage to 0.5 million sq km by 2025 and 1.0 million sq km by 2030, Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Puri said. With 2.5 lakh sq km open for exploration under OALP Round-10, and being close to discovering a Guyana-scale oilfield in the Andaman Sea, India is in the midst of one of the most ambitious plans to enhance the efforts to drill for more and further enhance hydrocarbons exploration in the country, said the Minister at 9th OPEC International Seminar in Vienna. India is making significant efforts to increase its traditional fossil-based energy production, and the latest push is to explore the Andaman region. India plans to explore and drill for hydrocarbons with renewed momentum by exploring 2.5 lakh sq km under OALP-Round 10. The minister interacted on 'Oil Markets: Energy Security, Growth and Prosperity' with an audience of leaders, captains and professionals of global energy sector at the Seminar. This ambition to double exploration acreage, according to the Minister, is supported by a series of policy reforms including shifting from a Production Sharing Contract regime to a Revenue Sharing Model under HELP, and amendments to ORD Act 1948 to provide a robust framework for managing leases, improving safety, enabling dispute resolution, and supporting the integration of renewable energy sources in hydrocarbon projects. In addition, the government is reducing 'No-Go' areas by 99 per cent, and in the process freeing up over 1 million sqkm for exploration and production (E&P), and significant investments in basin data acquisition through national projects such as the National Seismic Program (NSP), Andaman Offshore Project, Mission Anveshan, and the Extended Continental Shelf Survey. India is the world's third-largest energy consumer with a demand of about 5.4 million barrels of oil per day. 'India's energy strategy is rooted in pragmatism, resilience, and fairness. India is both a structural growth engine and a long-term stabilizer of global oil markets,' the minister said. At the Seminar, the minister said India will contribute 25 per cent of the incremental global energy demand growth in future. 'We are navigating today's volatile global energy landscape through a multi-dimensional approach that includes diversifying our crude import sources from 27 to 40 countries now, enhancing domestic production, developing alternative fuel sources, transition towards gas based economy and aiming to become a global refining hub by increasing our refining capacity to 310 MMTPA by 2028 and augmenting petrochemical capacity to be a USD 300 billion industry by 2030,' the minister said. Even as the world was dealing with geopolitical difficulties, Puri said India successfully navigated the trilemma of energy availability, affordability, and sustainability; and was the only major economy in the world to reduce fuel prices even as oil prices skyrocketed globally. He apprised the Seminar that India aims to achieve energy independence by 2047 and reach Net Zero emissions by 2070. He also highlighted India's green energy transition, referring to biofuels. India launched the Global Biofuels Alliance which has over 29 countries and 14 international organisations, working together to scale up sustainable biofuels. Domestically, India is accelerating the use of ethanol, CBG, biodiesel and SAF as part of its decarbonization roadmap, the minister added. India today imports 80 per cent of its oil and 50 per cent of its natural gas needs. India is now importing oil and gas from as many countries as possible to meet its demand. (ANI)

Purdue sports has $20.5 million revenue sharing cap. How will it be distributed?
Purdue sports has $20.5 million revenue sharing cap. How will it be distributed?

Yahoo

time23-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Purdue sports has $20.5 million revenue sharing cap. How will it be distributed?

WEST LAFAYETTE − Purdue University's commitment to football and men's basketball under the new revenue sharing model will absorb most of the $20.5 million cap. Purdue director of athletics Mike Bobinski wouldn't detail how exact dollar figures or percentages will be allocated for the 2025-26 school year, which officially surfaced with the house vs. NCAA settlement earlier this month allowing schools to pay student-athletes directly. Advertisement Bobinski did say Purdue has allocated revenue sharing funds for football, men's basketball, women's basketball and volleyball. Additionally, Purdue has set aside "roughly" $300,000 for non-revenue sports "to either retain or recruit elite level athletes." Coaches in Purdue's non-revenue sharing sports can appeal for money in those instances and they'll be considered on a case-by-case basis. More: Paying players, private equity, roster limits: What House settlement means for Purdue More: What does the NCAA settlement mean for college sports? We answer the burning questions Asked if Purdue will take a 75% for football, 15% for men's basketball approach that is somewhere in the neighborhood of the industry standard, Bobinski said it'll be a little less than that for football and more for men's basketball, citing Purdue's current position in the national men's basketball landscape. Advertisement How those programs divvy those funds is at their discretion, but Bobinski noted both are wisely holding some funding back for players in the spring transfer portal window. Non revenue-sharing sports will receive help by way of Alston support payments, which awards payments capped at $5,980 per school year for reaching academic benchmarks. With Purdue retaining funding of the Alston payments, $1.165 million will be cut from Purdue's $20.5 million revenue sharing limit, but Bobinski said he's uncertain if that will continue. Bobinski has maintained his stance since the initial revenue sharing model discussions were introduced that Purdue would be a full participant. The $20.5 million figure will increase to $21.3 on July 1, 2026 ahead of the 2026-27 school year. Sam King covers sports for the Journal & Courier. Email him at sking@ and follow him on X and Instagram @samueltking. Purdue athletic director Mike Bobinski speaks Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024, during the welcoming of Purdue football head coach Barry Odom at Mackey Arena in West Lafayette, Ind. This article originally appeared on Lafayette Journal & Courier: Purdue puts bulk of revenue share into football, men's basketball

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