ONGC Videsh Ltd (OVL), the overseas arm of state-owned firm Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC), and Cairn India Ltd are likely to bid jointly for oil and gas blocks in Sri Lanka, according to sources with direct knowledge of the development.
The island nation is offering 13 offshore exploration blocks in the Cauvery and Mannar basins, located at its North and West.
The OVL-Cairn combine is likely to bid for three of the blocks, the sources said.
Bids for the Sri Lankan Licensing Round close on November 29.
OVL seeks to hold at least a 51 per cent stake in the consortium it intends to form with Cairn for bidding in the second licencing round of the island nation, the sources said. Of interest of OVL are three blocks - M4, M5 and M6 - in the Mannar basin, they said.
Cairn already has a block in Mannar basin where it has made two gas discoveries. It had won the block in Sri Lanka's first licensing round in 2007 by defeating OVL and Niko Resources of Canada.
Sri Lanka's Petroleum Resource Development Secretariat (PRDS) Director General Saliya Wickramasuriya had in September stated that oil majors Exxon Mobil Corp, Royal Dutch Shell, France's Total and Eni of Italy have shown interest in bidding for blocks on offer.
PRDS is the government agency responsible for overseeing all petroleum exploration and production-related activities in Sri Lanka, the island nation which is trying to reinvigorate oil and gas exploration and expects to award the blocks in the first quarter of 2014.
At present, Sri Lanka does not produce oil or gas. It spent $5 billion on imports in 2012.
Besides the 13 shallow water blocks, Sri Lanka has also offered six ultra-deepwater blocks off the south-eastern coast for a joint study with PRDS to establish their hydrocarbon potential.
The blocks on offer in the Cauvery basin range in size from 2,403 square kilometers, in the shallow waters of the Palk Straight, between Sri Lanka and India, to 4,566 sq km in deep water areas to the northeast of Sri Lanka.
The blocks in the Mannar basin are larger, ranging in size from 2,714 sq km to 8,120 sq km in the deep to very deep waters of the Gulf of Mannar.
Although there have been no oil or gas discoveries in the Sri Lankan sector of the Cauvery basin, the Indian sector of the basin has significant oil and gas fields.