Explained: Proposed Shift from Point-to-Point (P2P)
"Recommends a study and stakeholder dialogue for adopting an Entry–Exit (E–E) tariff system."
What India currently follows:
Shippers book capacity along a defined route, from a specific injection point to a specific offtake point.
Requires multiple contracts tied to physical pipeline segments.
What is an Entry–Exit (E–E) System?
Shippers book capacity at entry and exit points independently (where gas enters and leaves).
They do not need to reserve a specific path through the network (Route-free nominations).
If a customer in the GSPL LP line takes gas from KG Basin via: KG Basin → PIL → GSPL HP → GSPL LP. Shippers still execute a Point-to-Point contract, tied to actual pipeline segments. PNGRB applies a Unified Tariff and splits it internally among operators.
India has partly implemented E–E through the UFT, but it sits on top of the existing P2P booking system.
| Aspect | India (UFT / P2P) | True Entry–Exit (Global) |
|---|---|---|
| Booking | Per pipeline segment | Entry + exit points only |
| Contracts | Multiple (per pipeline) | Single contract |
| Nominations | Per pipeline segment | Single nomination at entry & exit |
| Routing | Shipper follows physical path | Operator manages internal routing |
| Tariff | Single unified tariff | Separate entry and exit tariffs |
| Billing | Multiple invoices internally apportioned | Shipper pays entry + exit; operator splits internally |
| Imbalances | Per pipeline segment | Overall entry–exit path |
| Title Transfer | At each physical delivery point | At a Virtual Trading Point (VTP) |
| Flexibility | Low | High |
Old Contracts Need Updating
Current agreements were made for fixed routes; changing them may affect who gets how much gas and which pipelines are used.
Pipelines Aren’t Fully Connected
Many lines are still separate or dedicated to specific flows. Gas cannot move freely everywhere yet.
Fair Access for Everyone
Some operators also sell gas themselves, complicating open access. New rules must be redesigned for entry and exit points.
Operational Complexity
Operators must manage flows, nominations, and balances across a complex, multi-pipeline system.
Tracking Imbalances & Ownership
Shippers need new ways to manage differences between injected and withdrawn volumes and to allow trading at virtual points.
Getting Everyone On Board
Shippers and operators are used to the old system, and infrastructure in some regions is still developing.
Source: PNGRB Vision 2040 Report (Rec. 70) and associated studies on gas market evolution.