New
Delhi, June 3, 2022.
To
commemorate World Environment Day on June 5, Cairn Oil & Gas, India’s
largest private oil and gas exploration and production company, has announced
that its Mangala pipeline will now be converted to solar. The Mangala pipeline
is the world’s longest continuously heated and insulated pipeline that runs
from oil fields of Rajasthan to the refineries in Gujarat – traversing 705 km.
Discussing
the company’s initiative to adopt solar power for its celebrated pipeline, Prachur
Sah, Deputy CEO Cairn Oil & Gas, said, “The Mangala pipeline has been a
great asset for Cairn Oil & Gas. Its unique technology has allowed the
transportation of waxy crude from our Rajasthan fields to refineries in Gujarat.
Mangala pipeline has been a testimony to our industry leading practices and now,
its conversion to solar power is pioneering yet another first for the oil and gas
industry. We look forward to several more years of successful production from
Barmer and the Mangala pipeline will the backbone of sustaining our ambitions.”
At
COP 26 last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced that India will
achieve net-zero emissions by 2070. In line with the country’s ambitious goals,
Cairn Oil & Gas is today pioneering ESG leadership in the sector and has
committed to achieve net-zero carbon by 2050. For this, the company has created
a robust ESG roadmap with a slew of diverse initiatives – the first in the
country’s oil and gas sector to take this step. In fact, Cairn decision to
convert its much-celebrated Mangala pipeline into a fully solar-operated
pipeline flows from this ESG vision.
Discovered in 2004,
Cairn’s Mangala oil field in Rajasthan was the largest global discovery of the
year and India's largest onshore discovery in 25 years. The field is also home
to the Mangala pipeline – the world's longest continuously heated and insulated
pipeline that runs from the fields of Rajasthan to refineries in Gujarat –
covering 705 kilometers. The pipeline is a technology marvel that was built to
make the transportation of waxy crude produced from the prolific Mangala
pipeline a thriving reality.
Now, this
celebrated pipeline is making the solar switch. In line with its de carbonization
commitment to reduce carbon footprint, Cairn is cutting dependence on more
polluting sources of power and setting an important precedent in the industry. The midstream team at
Mangala has initiated project to install rooftop solar photovoltaic on the
available area of Above Ground Installations (AGIs) in a phase wise manner with
the target of installing complete solar rooftop in all 36 AGIs by 2025. The
goal is to shift the complete AGI load to solar energy and make our world’s
longest continuously heated and insulated hydrocarbon carrying pipeline a
greener and more efficient resource. Before this, the power for AGI operations
in the midstream location in Gujarat was fully imported from the state
electricity board and its predominantly coal-based power which comes with a
much higher GHG emission intensity. So far, Cairn has installed total 13 AGIs
with solar rooftop capacity of 15KW that is cumulatively reducing approximately
270 tons of CO2e/annum. Further, plan is to install solar on 10 AGIs each year
to complete the project for FY 2025 and achieve total GHG reduction of ~770
tons of CO2e/annum.
As countries across
the globe and India itself races to adopt cleaner sources of energy to control
emissions and climate change, Cairn is leading the way in the oil and gas
industry by combining the best of both fossil and non-fossil energy sources.
The company remains committed to the country’s net-zero targets and its ESG
vision lays the roadmap towards that end.