17 February 2020
Supreme Court
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ADANI GAS LIMITED Vs PETROLEUM AND NATURAL GAS REGULATORY BOARD

Bench: HON'BLE DR. JUSTICE D.Y. CHANDRACHUD, HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE HEMANT GUPTA
Judgment by: HON'BLE DR. JUSTICE D.Y. CHANDRACHUD
Case number: C.A. No.-003992 / 2019
Diary number: 14043 / 2019
Advocates: E. C. AGRAWALA Vs


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Reportable   

        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA  

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION    

Civil Appeal No 3992 of 2019        

Adani Gas Limited                          ...Appellant            

                                                                               Versus   

     

Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board & Ors.            ...Respondents         

With  

Civil Appeal Nos 3234-3235 of 2019  

With  

Civil Appeal Nos 3247-3248 of 2019  

With  

Civil Appeal No 3289 of 2019  

With  

Civil Appeal No 4527 of 2019  

With  

T.C. (C) No 27 of 2019  

With  

T.C. (C) No 26 of 2019   

And With  

Civil Appeal No 106 of 2020

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J U D G M E N T  

     

Dr Dhananjaya Y Chandrachud J  

 1. In 2018 the Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board

1  conducted the  

ninth round of bidding for City or Local Natural Gas Distribution Networks 2 . On 14  

September 2018, a press release was placed on the Board‘s website notifying  

details of the successful bidders in various Geographical Areas 3 . The contest in  

the present batch of appeals has arisen over the grant of authorisation for laying,  

building, operating or expanding CGD networks in the following GAs:  

(i) GA 51 - Puducherry District;  

(ii) GA 61 - Kanchipuram District; and   

(iii) GA 62 – Chennai & Tiruvallur Districts.  

 2. The Appellate Tribunal for Electricity

4  was seized of two appeals – Appeal  

No 292 of 2018, instituted by Adani Gas Limited and Appeal No 323 of 2018,  

instituted by IMC Limited. These appeals were instituted before the APTEL under  

Section 30(1) of the Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board Act 2006 5 . By  

their separate judgments dated 28 February 2019, the Chairperson and Member  

Technical (Petroleum and Natural Gas) rendered divergent findings, following  

which the Chairperson directed that the proceedings in the two appeals be placed  

before the judicial member. The judicial member recused from hearing the  

                                           1  ―the Board‖  

2  ―CGD Networks‖  

3  ―GAs"  

4  ―APTEL‖ or ―Tribunal‖  

5  ―PNGRB Act‖  

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appeals on 7 March 2019. This led to the institution of the present appeals before  

this Court. Noting that no other judicial member was available in the APTEL to  

conduct the hearing, this Court by its order dated 1 April 2019 admitted the  

appeals and issued directions in exercise of its powers under Article 142 of the  

Constitution for the transfer of the proceedings before the APTEL to this Court in  

order to bring finality to the present dispute. In assessing the merits, the Court  

has had the benefit of appraising the differing views which have been expressed  

by the Chairperson and by the Member Technical (Petroleum and Natural Gas).   

 3. The APTEL has been constituted in terms of sub-Section (1) of Section 30  

of the PNGRB Act which is extracted below:  

―30. Appellate Tribunal. (1) Subject to the provisions of this  

Act, the Appellate Tribunal established under section 110 of  

the Electricity Act, 2003 (36 of 2003) shall be the Appellate  

Tribunal for the purposes of this Act and the said Appellate  

Tribunal shall exercise the jurisdiction, powers and authority  

conferred on it by or under this Act:   

Provided that the Technical Member of the Appellate Tribunal  

for the purposes of this Act shall be called the Technical  

Member (Petroleum and Natural Gas) and shall have the  

qualifications specified in sub-section (2) of section 31.‖  

 

 Section 33 stipulates that any person aggrieved by an order or decision of the  

Board has recourse to an appeal to the Tribunal. The jurisdiction of the APTEL  

while hearing an appeal is spelt out in sub-Section (6) of Section 33 in the  

following terms:  

―33.(6) The Appellate Tribunal may, for the purpose of  

examining the legality or propriety or correctness of any order  

or decision of the Board referred to in the appeal filed under  

sub-section (1), either on its own motion or otherwise, call for  

the records relevant to disposing of such appeal and make  

such orders as it thinks fit.‖  

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An appeal lies to this Court against an order of the APTEL, other than an  

interlocutory order, under Section 37 on the grounds set out in Section 100 of the  

Code of Civil Procedure 1908. With this background, we now turn to the PNGRB  

Act under the aegis of which the ninth round of CGD bidding occurred.   

 PNGRB Act and regulations   

4. The content of the PNGRB Act is summarised by its long title as:  

―An Act to provide for the establishment of Petroleum and  

Natural Gas Regulatory Board to regulate the refining,  

processing, storage, transportation, distribution, marketing  

and sale of petroleum, petroleum products and natural gas  

excluding production of crude oil and natural gas so as to  

protect the interests of consumers and entities engaged in  

specified activities relating to petroleum, petroleum products  

and natural gas and to ensure uninterrupted and adequate  

supply of petroleum, petroleum products and natural gas in all  

parts of the country and to promote competitive markets and  

for matters connected therewith or incidental thereto.‖  

   

The PNGRB Act came into force, in terms of the provisions contained in Section  

1(3) on 1 October 2007, save and except for Section 16. Section 16 which  

provides for the authorisation for building or expanding CGD Networks, came into  

force on 15 July 2010. Section 16, insofar as is material contains the following  

stipulations:  

―16. Authorisation.—No entity shall—   

(a) lay, build, operate or expand any pipeline as a common  

carrier or contract carrier,   

(b) lay, build, operate or expand any city or local natural gas  

distribution network, without obtaining authorisation under this  

Act: … ‖  

 

Under Section 19 of the PNGRB Act, the Board may grant an authorisation for a  

city or local natural gas distribution network either on the basis of an application

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or suo moto. Before it does so in a specified GA, the Board is under a mandate to  

give wide publicity of its intent to do so. Upon inviting applications from interested  

parties, the Board may select an entity ―in an objective and transparent manner  

as specified by regulations for such activities‖.  

 5. On 19 March 2008, the Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board  

(Authorizing Entities to Lay, Build, Operate or Expand City or Local Natural Gas  

Distribution Networks) Regulations 2008 6  were notified. The CGD Authorisation  

Regulations were amended on 21 June 2013, 7 April 2014 and 6 April 2018. The  

CGD Authorisation Regulations, as amended in 2018, substituted new criteria for  

bidding which applied to the ninth round of bidding with which the present batch  

of appeals is concerned.  

 6. Regulation 6 of the CGD Authorisation Regulations provides for the  

invitation by the Board for laying, building, operating or expanding of a CGD  

network in a specific city or GA. The procedure stipulated in Regulation 5 is to  

apply, except for those aspects relating to expressions of interest. Under  

Regulation 5(6), the Board can scrutinise only those bids which are received in  

response to an advertisement and from entities which fulfil certain minimum  

eligibility criteria. Regulation 5(6)(b) spells out the criteria,  which are designed to  

ensure that the entity bidding is technically capable of laying and building a CGD  

network in the relevant city or GA. Regulation 5(6)(c) enunciates criteria which  

ensure that the entity is technically capable of operating and maintaining a CGD  

                                           6  ―CGD Authorisation Regulations‖

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network. Besides the technical criteria, the Regulations also spell out certain  

financial criteria which potential bidders must satisfy. Regulation 5(6)(e) provides:  

―(6)  The Board shall scrutinise the bids received in  response to the advertisement in respect of only those  entities which fulfil the following minimum eligibility criteria,  namely:-     …    (e) the entity has adequate financial strength to execute  the proposed project, operate and maintain the same in the  authorised area and shall meet the following financial criterion  to qualify for bidding for a single CGD network namely:-  

   

Population in the  

geographical area as per  

2011 Census of India  

Minimum net worth of the bidder entity  

(1) (2)  

5 million or more  Rs. 1,500 million for a population of 5 million,  

plus additional Rs. 300 million for each 1  

million of population or part thereof, in excess  

of 5 million (refer Note-3)  

2 million or more but less than  

5 million   

Rs.1,000 million   

1 million or more but less than  

2 million   

Rs. 750 million   

0.5 million or more but less  

than 1 million   

Rs. 500 million   

0.25 million or more but less  

than 0.50 million   

Rs. 250 million   

0.1 million or more but less  

than 0.25 million   

Rs. 100 million   

Less than 0.1 million  Rs. 50 million   

           ‖    

 The minimum net-worth of the bidding entity is thus linked to the population of the  

GA the entity is bidding for, as set out in 2011 Census data.   

 7. Regulation 7 of the CGD Authorisation Regulations provides the criteria for  

determining how the Board should evaluate rival bids for the same GA.  

Regulation 7 is quoted below, in its entirety:  

―7. Bidding criteria.  

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 1(a)  The Board, while considering the proposal for authorisation, shall  

tabulate and compare all financial bids meeting the minimum eligibility  

criteria, as per the bidding criteria specified below, namely:-  

 

Sl.  

No  

Bidding Criteria Weightage   

%  

Explanation  

1 Lowness of transportation  

rate for CGD – in rupees  

per million British Thermal  

Unit (Rs./MMBTU)  

10 Bidder is required to quote  

transportation rate for CGD  

only for the first contract  

year which shall not be less  

than Rs.30/MMBTU. Rates  

for the subsequent contract  

years shall be derived  

considering the quoted rate  

and escalation as per Note.  

2 Lowness of transportation  

rate for CNG – in rupees  

per kilo gram (Rs./kg)  

10 Bidder is required to quote  

transportation rate for CNG  

only for the first contract  

year which shall not be less  

than Rs.2/kg. Rates for the  

subsequent contract years  

shall be derived considering  

the quoted rate and  

escalation as per Note.  

 

3 Highness of number of  

CNG stations  (online and  

daughter booster stations)  

to be installed within 8  

contract years from the  

date of authorisation  

20 -  

4 Highness of number of  

domestic piped natural gas  

connections to be achieved  

within 8 contract years from  

the date of authorisation  

50 -  

5 Highness of inch-kilometre  

of steel pipeline (including  

sub-transmission steel  

pipelines) to be laid within  

8 contract years from the  

date of authorisation  

10 -  

Note – Annual escalation shall be considered from the second contract year  

and onwards based on the ―Wholesale Price Index (WPI) Data (2011-12 =100)‖  

for ―All Group/ Commodity‖, as normally available on the website of the Office of  

the Economic Adviser, Government of India, Ministry of Commerce and  

Industry, Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) on the link  

―http://eaindustry.nic.in/home.asp.‖   

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Provided that in the case of the geographical areas of (i) Bilaspur, Hamirpur and  

Una Districts; (ii) Panchkula (Except area already authorised), Shimla, Solan and  

Sirmaur Districts and (iii) Barmer, Jaisalmer and Jodhpur Districts, it is not  

mandatory to supply natural gas through steel-pipes. However natural gas has to  

reach in all charge areas. The bidding parameters and their respective weightage  

will, accordingly, be as under:-  

 

Sl.  

No  

Bidding Criteria Weightage  

%  

Explanation  

1 Lowness of  

transportation rate for  

CGD – in rupees per  

million British Thermal  

Unit (Rs./MMBTU)  

10 Bidder is required to quote  

transportation rate for CGD  

only for the first contract  

year which shall not be less  

than Rs.30/MMBTU. Rates  

for the subsequent contract  

years shall be derived  

considering the quoted rate  

and escalation as per Note.  

2 Lowness of  

transportation rate for  

CNG – in rupees per kilo  

gram (Rs./kg)  

10 Bidder is required to quote  

transportation rate for CNG  

only for the first contract  

year which shall into be less  

than Rs.2/kg. Rates for the  

subsequent contract years  

shall be derived considering  

the quoted rate and  

escalation as per Note.  

3 Highness of number of  

CNG stations (online  

and daughter booster  

stations) to be installed  

within 8 contract years  

from the date of  

authorisation  

25 -  

4 Highness of number of  

domestic piped natural  

gas connections to be  

achieved within 8  

contract years from the  

date of authorisation   

55 -  

Note: Annual escalation shall be considered from the second contract year and  

onwards based on the ―Wholesale Price Index (WPI) Data (2011-12=100)‖ for  

―All Group / Commodity‖, as normally available on the website of the Office of  

the Economic  Adviser, Government of India, Ministry of Commerce and  

Industry, Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) on the link  

―http://eaindustry.nic.in/home.asp.‖  

 

 

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1(b)  Successful bidder shall be required to achieve the year-wise work  

programme within 8 contract years as per details given below, namely:-  

 

PNG Connections  

     (cumulative)  

CNG stations  

(cumulative)  

Inch-km of steel pipeline   

(cumulative)  

By the  

end of  

contract  

year  

% of work  

programme  

By the  

end of  

contract  

year  

% of work  

programme  

By the  

end of  

contract  

year  

% of work  

programme  

1 st  Nil 1

st  Nil 1

st  5  

2 nd

10 2 nd

15 2 nd

20  

3 rd

20 3 rd

30 3 rd

40  

4 th   30 4

th  45 4

th  60  

5 th  40 5

th  60 5

th  70  

6 th  60 6

th  75 6

th  80  

7 th  80 7

th  90 7

th  90  

8 th  100 8

th  100 8

th  100  

Note:- In case derived numbers are in fraction, the same shall be rounded off  

to the nearest whole number and fraction 0.5 shall be rounded off to next  

higher whole number.  

 

Provided that in the case of the geographical areas of (i) Bilaspur, Hamirpur  

and Una Districts; (ii) Panchkula (Except area already authorised), Shimla,  

Solan and Sirmaur Districts and (iii) Barmer, Jaisalmer and Jodhpur Districts,  

successful bidder shall be required to achieve the year-wise work programme  

within 10 contract years as per details given below, namely:-  

 

PNG Connections (cumulative)  

 

CNG stations (cumulative)  

By the end of  

contract year  

% of work  

programme  

By the end of  

contract year  

% of work  

programme  

1st Nil 1 st  Nil  

2 nd

10 2 nd

10  

3 rd

20 3 rd

20  

4 th  30 4

th  30  

5 th  40 5

th  40  

6 th  50 6

th  50  

7 th  60 7

th  60  

8 th  70 8

th  70  

9 th  80 9

th  80  

10 th  100 10

th  100  

Note – In case derived numbers are in fraction, the same shall be rounded off  

to the nearest whole number and fraction 0.5 shall be rounded off to next  

higher whole number.  

 

(2)  ***********  

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(3) Bidder entity with the highest composite score, considering the criteria  

under sub-regulation (1) and as illustrated in Schedule C (1), shall be  

declared as successful bidder.  

 

Provided that in case of tie in the evaluated composite score, the successful  

bidder shall be decided based on the highness of numbers of PNG  

connections among the tied bidding entities. In case there is tie on number of  

PNG connections also, highness of inch-kilometer steel pipeline shall be  

considered and thereafter in case of tie in inch-kilometer as well, highness of  

numbers of CNG stations shall be considered;‖  

 

Under Regulation 7, the Board while considering proposals for authorisation,  

shall tabulate and compare all financial bids which meet the minimum eligibility  

criteria in accordance with the bidding criteria set out as enunciated. The table  

set out in Regulation 7(1)(a) provides for the tabulation of all eligible financial bids  

on the basis of five parameters. The table enunciates the five bidding criteria and  

the weightage which is to be ascribed to each of them. The criteria are as follows:   

 (i)  The first criterion is the ‗lowness‘ of the transportation rate for CGD  

computed in rupees per million for a British Thermal Unit. The  

weightage ascribed to this criterion is 10 per cent. The explanation  

stipulates that a bidder is required to quote the transportation rate  

for CGD only for the first contract year at a rate not less than Rs 30  

per MMBTU;  

(ii)  The second criterion is the ‗lowness‘ of the transportation rate for  

CNG expressed in rupees per kilogram. The weightage ascribed to  

this criterion is 10 per cent. The bidder is required to quote the  

transportation rate only for the first contract year at a rate of not less  

than Rs 2 per kilogram;

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(iii) The third criterion is the ‗highness‘ of the number of CNG stations to  

be installed within eight contract years from the date of  

authorisation. The weightage ascribed to this parameter is 20 per  

cent;  

(iv) The fourth criterion is the ‗highness‘ of the number of domestic  

piped natural gas connections to be achieved within eight contract  

years from the date of authorisation. The weightage ascribed to this  

criterion is 50 per cent; and   

(v) The fifth criterion is the ‗highness‘ of the inch-kilometre of steel  

pipeline to be laid within eight contract years from the date of  

authorisation.  The weightage ascribed to this parameter is 10 per  

cent.   

Regulation 7(1)(b) sets out a year-wise work programme indicating the progress  

which must be achieved by the successful bidder every year during the course of  

eight contract years from the date of authorisation. Under Regulation 7(3), a  

bidding entity with the highest composite score, in terms of the criteria contained  

in sub-regulation (1), is to be declared as the successful bidder. This is illustrated  

in Schedule C(1) of the CGD Authorisation Regulations. Schedule C(1) contains  

the following illustration of the manner in which the weightage for PNG  

connections is to be ascribed:  

―(E) Number of PNG domestic connections  

Let,  

P1 = Number of PNG domestic connections by the 1 st

 

entity

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P2 = Number of the PNG domestic connections by the  

2 nd

entity  

P3 = Number of the PNG domestic connections by the  

3 rd

entity   

Assume P1 is higher than P2 and P2 is higher than  

P3.;  

The highest number of PNG domestic connections bid  

(HP1) shall be given a score of 100% and the number of  

the other PNG domestic connections bids shall be given a  

score in relation to HP1 on a pro-rata basis as under :-  

 

HP1 = 100%  

HP2 = 100 % x (P2 ÷ P1)  

HP3 = 100 % x (P3 ÷ P1)  

                ‖  

This illustration shows that the entity which has quoted the highest number of  

PNG domestic connections to be achieved is allotted a score of 100 per cent.  

The entities below the highest will be assigned a score in relation to the first entity  

on a proportionate basis.   

 8. Under Regulation 9, the grant of an authorisation is to be issued to a  

successful entity after it furnishes a performance bond. The quantum of the  

performance bond is based on the population of the GA as determined with  

reference to the census data of 2011. Regulation 9 states:  

―9. Performance bond.  

(1) Grant of authorisation shall be issued to the  

successful entity after it furnishes the performance bond  

in the form of demand draft or pay order or bank  

guarantee from any scheduled bank for the amount as per  

details given below, namely:-  

 

Serial Population in the Amount of

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Number  Geographical Area, as  

pre 2011 Census of India   

Performance  

Bond (Rupees)  

1 5 million or more  500 million   

2 2 million or more but less  

than 5 million   

330 million   

3 1 million or more but less  

than 2 million   

250 million   

4 0.5 million or more but less  

than 1 million   

150 million   

5 0.25 million or more but  

less than 0.50 million   

80 million   

6 0.1 million or more but less  

than 0.25 million   

30 million   

7 Less than 0.1 million  15 million   

          ‖  

Under Regulation 10, the successful entity is to be issued a letter of intent 7  upon  

the finalisation of the bid. Under the CGD Authorisation Regulations, the  

authorised entity must also obtain financial closure for the project from a bank or  

financial institution within 270 days of authorisation.   

 9. The period of implementation of the project under the ninth round of CGD  

bidding is 2018 to 2026. The period for commercial operation is between 2018  

and 2043.   

 10. From an analysis of the CGD Authorisation Regulations, it becomes  

evident that the 2011 census figures have been utilised to peg the net-worth  

requirement in Regulation 5(6)(e) and the value of the performance bond to be  

submitted to the Board post authorisation in Regulation 9. Significantly,  

Regulation 7, which provides a table specifying the five bidding criteria to  

                                           7  ―LOI‖

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evaluate competing bids, does not link the said criteria with the census figures of  

2011.  

 Facts of the present appeals       11. On 12 April 2018, the Board initiated the bidding process for authorising  

entities to lay, build, operate or expand CGD networks for the ninth round. The  

bids were invited by means of an application-cum-bid-document for each GA. 8   

The bidding process covered various GAs, including those of (i) GA 51 -  

Puducherry District; (ii) GA – 61 Kanchipuram District; and (iii) GA 62 -Chennai-

Tiruvallur.   

 12. Clause 1.1. of the Bid Document was titled ‗Geographical area and related  

information‘. Clause 1.1.1 stipulated that the Board had identified a GA and was  

accordingly inviting applications-cum-bids for the grant of authorisation for  

developing a CGD network in the GA. Each GA was depicted in a map at  

Annexure-1 of the Bid Document for the relevant GA. Under Clause 1.1.3, it was  

the responsibility of each bidder to obtain all information related to the present  

gas supply availability, pipeline connectivity and information about existing  

customers, if any, in the specified GA. Clause 1.1.3 stated:   

―1.1.3. It is the bidder’s responsibility to obtain all  

information related to the present gas supply availability  

and pipeline connectivity and also existing customers, if  

any, in the specified geographical area. The bidder can  

also refer to list of NOCs/Permissions granted by PNGRB to  

various entities under the provisions of the Internal Guidelines  

for grant of NOC/Permission for (i) supply/distribution of  

CBM/natural gas through cascades; and (ii) setting up of  

CNG/LNG Daughter Booster Stations (DBS), in the areas  

where the Board has not yet authorized any entity for  

                                           8  With respect to the relevant GA, ―Bid Document‖

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developing or operating CGD networks at  

http://www.pngrb.gov.in/CGD-NOCs.html.‖   (Emphasis supplied)   

 

 

The scope of work was defined in Clause 1.2 of the Bid Document:  

―The entities bidding for this work shall be required to lay,  

build, operate or expand the CGD networks to meet  

requirement of natural gas in domestic, commercial and  

industrial segments including Natural Gas in the vehicular  

segment in the said geographical area to be authorized and  

also comply with the relevant regulations notified from time to  

time.   

The entities shall be required to carry out the development of  

CGD project in line with the regulations laid down by the  

PNGRB.‖  

 

 

13. Clause 2.1.1 required the bidders to examine the contents of the Bid  

Document and the regulations of the Board. Clause 2.1.2 described Annexure-1  

as the map depicting the GA and charge areas. Under Clause 2.2.1, any  

clarifications were required to be obtained from the Secretary of the Board on or  

before the bid closing date. Clause 4.2 stipulated that all financial bids would be  

tabulated and compared in accordance with the bidding criteria specified in  

Regulation 7 and Schedule-C(1) of the CGD Authorisation Regulations.  

Moreover, the bidder with the highest composite score would be declared as  

successful in the bid. Under Clause 4.4 of the Bid Document, the Board reserved  

the right to accept or reject any bid which it considered to be ―unreasonably high  

or low‖:  

―4.4 PNRGB'S RIGHT TO ACCEPT OR REJECT ANY OR  

ALL APPLICATION-CUM-BIDS  

 

4.4.1 PNRGB reserves the right to reject any Application-

cum-Bid comprising quoted work programme considered by it  

to be unreasonably high or low.‖  

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On 31 May 2018, Addendum-1 to the Bid Document was issued by the Board.  

Clause 14.2, inserted as a result of Addendum-1, contained the following  

clarification:  

―14.2 What should be considered to be the level of  

"unreasonably high" or "unreasonably low" quotes shall be  

decided by Board at the time of bid evaluation on a case to  

case basis after considering the relevant factors.‖  

 

According to the above stipulation, the Board clarified that the determination of an  

unreasonably high or low quote would be made by the Board at the time of bid  

evaluation on a case to case basis after considering the relevant factors.  

 14. On 10 July 2018, three bid evaluation committees

9  were nominated by the  

Board for evaluating the bid documents. On 12 July 2018, a press release was  

issued by the Board setting out the date and time for the opening of technical  

bids for different GAs. The technical bids for GA 51 (Puducherry) were to be  

opened on 16 July 2018 at 14.00 hours; for GA 61 (Kanchipuram) on 17 July  

2018 at 12.30 hours; and for GA 62 (Chennai-Tiruvallur) on 17 July 2018 at 13.30  

hours. The technical bids were opened by the Board in the presence of the  

bidders‘ representatives.   

 15. On 23 July 2018, a note

10  was moved for the approval of the members of  

the Board with a view to encourage serious bidders and to avoid  

unrealistic/unreasonable bidding in terms of Clause 4.4.1 of the Bid Document.  

The Board Note, insofar as is material provided:  

                                           9  (―BECs‖)  

10  ―Board Note‖

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―Subject: Reasonability of Bidding Parameters  

Bid evaluation for technical bid is under progress for all 86  

GAs. Technical bid queries are being issued and it is  

expected that the Financial bid opening may be started from  

this week (24 th  July onwards) for various GAs. The bidding  

parameters have been completely changed in current round.   

In order to promote serious bidders and to avoid any  

unrealistic/unreasonable bidding number committed by entity,  

PNGRB has included a rejection clause in Para 4.4.1 of  

application-cum-bid documents. The clause is reproduced  

below:  

―PNGRB reserves the right to reject any Application-cum-Bid  

comprising quoted work programme considered by it to be  

unreasonably high or law.‖  

Since technical bids for some of the GAs are about to be  

concluded, it is essential to decide upon the reasonability of  

the bidding parameters which are constituting work  

programme. In this regard, following is proposed:  

1. No of PNG Domestic connections:  

Lower Limit: Ministry of Petroleum and  

Natural Gas (MoP&NG) vide letter No L-

16021/9/2013-GP-1 (pt.) dated 16 th  August  

2016, constituted a committee to examine the  

City Gas Distribution (CGD) bidding related  

issues. The committee in its report  

recommended minimum work programme  

(MWP) for inter-alia PNG domestic  

connections as 7.5% of within district  

headquarters/ municipal limit. Prior to 9 th   

round, MWP for PNG domestic connections  

was fixed for 5 % total household. Considering  

above it is proposed that 2 % of total  

Household (Census 2011 data) may be  

considered as minimum.   

Maximum Limit: In order to reach at  

maximum value various possibilities has been  

discussed in house which includes conversion  

of LPG to PNG, maximum penetration at  

present in GAs etc. It is proposed to keep  

maximum limit of PNG Domestic connections  

as 100 % of Household (Census 2011 data).  

Beyond 100 % household may be treated as  

unreasonable quote.‖      

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18    

The Board Note was approved by the members of the Board including the  

Chairperson. Between 24 July 2018 and 18 August 2018, the financial bids  

submitted by the bidders for various GAs were opened by the Board.   

 16. The Board Note of 23 July 2018 adopted the Census 2011 data on the  

total number of households as the basis for computing the minimum and  

maximum limits for the purpose of determining unreasonably low or unreasonably  

high quotes. The Board Note stipulated that 2 per cent of the total households in  

terms of the Census 2011 data would be regarded as the minimum quote.  

Anything below 2 per cent would be considered unreasonably low. Similarly, on  

the upper end of the spectrum, the Board Note proposed that 100 per cent of the  

total households in terms of the Census 2011 data would be regarded as the  

maximum. A quotation beyond this upper limit would be construed to be  

unreasonably high. Now, two features of the note of the Board Note dated 23 July  

2018 must be noted. First, the Board Note was generated after the last date for  

the submission of bids. Second, the Board Note was an internal document of the  

Board which was not notified to the bidders.   

 17. The Board commenced the process of opening the financial bids on 24  

July 2018. On 2 August 2018, an agenda note was prepared for the Board. The  

agenda note outlined that three BECs were nominated for evaluating the bids  

received. Technical bids submitted by the bidders were evaluated by ICF, a  

consultant, based on the requirements of the Regulations and the Bid  

Documents. A summary sheet of the technical bid evaluation was prepared and  

checked by the BEC. Thirty-eight entities had submitted bids against 86 GAs.

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The financial bids of technically eligible bidders were recommended for opening.  

The agenda note dated 2 August 2018 spelt out the stipulation contained in  

paragraph 4.4.1 of the Bid Document, and of the previous decision of the Board,  

to adopt 2 per cent of the total households as the minimum and 100 per cent as  

the maximum, both on the basis of 2011 Census data. The agenda note  

contained a tabulation of the bids of technically qualified entities. The agenda  

note indicated that for four GAs: 35, 46, 48 and 49 where two bids had been  

received for each, the highest bidder had quoted an unreasonably low number of  

projected PNG connections at the end of eight contract years. Where the bid  

below 2 per cent was the sole bid for the GA, the bid was accepted as the GA  

would have gone ‗dry‘ otherwise. The agenda note proposed the adoption of  

three courses of action with respect to the remaining bids:  

(i) Rejection of the bids received for the above four GAs as being  

unreasonably low;  

(ii) Acceptance of the bids for the four GAs by extending to them the  

same logic that was applied for single bid GAs; or   

(iii) Inviting the concerned entities with the highest scores for each of  

the GAs for negotiation to improve the quoted work programme.   

 18. The agenda note dated 2 August 2018 was presented before the Board for  

deliberation on 3 August 2018. In its meeting, the Board accepted the proposal  

for the issuance of LOIs to entities of 48 GAs mentioned in table 3 of the agenda  

note. The proposal to invite entities with the highest scores which had submitted  

unreasonably low bids for each of the GAs for negotiations and to improve the

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20    

quoted work programme was approved. Accordingly, on 3 August 2018, the  

Board issued a press release recording that it had approved the issuance of LOIs  

to 18 successful bidders for 48 GAs. The press release indicated that the  

remaining GAs were being evaluated and the outcome would be notified shortly.   

 19. On 9 August 2018, an agenda note was issued by the Board noting that in  

pursuance of the decisions which were taken by the Board on 3 August 2018,  

letters have been addressed to the entities which had obtained the highest  

composite score but had quoted unreasonably low PNG connections, to confirm  

their acceptance of the minimum requirement of 2 per cent of households as per  

the 2011 Census data. Table 5 to the agenda note contained a tabulation of bids  

which were liable to be rejected due to unreasonably high or as the case may be,  

unreasonably low quotes. Among these bids were the bids received from H1  

bidders who had quoted unreasonably high PNG connections for the three GAs  

which form the subject matter of the present appeals. These were:  

    ―Table -5  

Sl No GA  No.  

Name of GA Name of  bidding  entities  

Quote Remarks  

11. GA 61 Kanchipuram  District   

Consortium of  AG&P LNG  Marketing Pte  Ltd. & Atlantic  Gulf & Pacific  Company of  Manila Inc.  

114% of  total HH  

7 other  valid bids  remains  

12. GA 62 Chennai &  Tiruvallur  Districts   

Torrent Gas  Private Limited   

157.00% of  total HH  

9 other  valid bids  remains   

13. GA 63 Coimbatore  District   

IMC Limited  107.06% of  total HH  

12 other  valid bids  remains   

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From the above Table-5, it can be seen that in 3 GAs have unreasonably  

High PNG Connections quoted have been received & also happens to be H1  

bidder and are liable for rejection.‖   

 

20. At this stage it may also be necessary to note that table 4 contained a  

tabulation of bids among them being those of bidders who were treated as not  

―Not-Qualified‖. The agenda note recommended that in three GAs, the bids of the  

highest bidders were liable to be rejected since they had quoted an unreasonably  

high number of PNG connections to be achieved at the end of eight contract  

years. Consequently, the names of the entities which were to be declared as  

successful bidders were tabulated in table 6 of the agenda note. According to the  

agenda note, after the names of the entities with the highest bids were removed,  

IMC Limited was recommended for being declared as the successful bidder for  

GA 61 (Kanchipuram District). Similarly, for GA 62 (Chennai & Tiruvallur  

Districts), Adani Gas Limited was recommended to be the successful bidder after  

the highest bid was declared as ―Not Qualified‖. The agenda note was prepared  

by the Authorisation Division and records that it was concurred with by the  

Member (I&T) and Member (C&M) and was approved by the Chairperson ―for  

deliberations and approval of the Board‖.   

 21. On 10 August 2018, a meeting was held by the Board. The minutes of the  

Board meeting recorded that out of four cases where the quotes for projected  

PNG domestic connections were higher than 100 per cent of the households  

under the 2011 Census, one of the bidders for GA 63 was not under  

consideration as its composite score was not the highest amongst the bids  

received for the GA. The other three bidders who had quoted more than 100 per

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cent of the households for PNG domestic connections were reflected in the  

following table:  

               ―  Sl  

No.   

GA  

No.   

GA name Bidding Entity  Quoted for PNG  

Domestic  

connections as %  

of households as  

per 2011 census   

1. 61 Kanchipuram  

Distt.  

Consortium of  

AG&P LNG  

marketing Pte  

Ltd. and Atlantic  

Gulf & Pacific  

Company of  

Manila Inc.  

114%  

2. 62 Chennai &  

Tiruvallur  

Districts  

Torrent Gas Pvt  

Ltd.  

157%  

3. 72 Medchal,  

Rangareddy  

& Vikarabad  

Districts   

Torrent Gas Pvt  

Ltd.   

220%  

               ‖  

The minutes of the meeting went on to record that:  

―During deliberations in the Board, the Board referred to  

clause 4.4.1 of ACBD which reads, ―PNGRB reserves the  

right to reject any application cum bid comprising quoted work  

program considered by it to be unreasonably high or low.‖ In  

terms of this clause vide note dated 23.07.2018 (i) lower and  

upper limits were decided for PNG domestic connections (ii)  

lower limits was decided for CNG Stations and (iii) no limit  

(higher or lower) was decided for Inch-KM of Steel pipeline.  

The Board deliberated that though lower and upper  

households were decided, the same need not be a  

mechanical exercise and an opportunity be given to affected  

entities to explain reasonableness of their quotes.‖   

 

22. The Board thus took a decision that the disqualification of bidders on the  

basis of the lower and upper thresholds of 2 per cent and 100 per cent of the  

2011 households which it had decided earlier ―need not be a mechanical  

exercise‖. Hence, a decision was taken to offer to the three affected entities for

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23    

GAs 61, 62 and 72, an opportunity to present their case on why their bids should  

not be rejected for being unreasonably high. The Board appears to have done so  

on the basis that the rejection of their bids, without an opportunity to present their  

case would not be ―legally correct‖. This is reflected in the following decision  

which was taken by the Board on 10 August 2018:  

―(a) To call the bidding entities for GA- 61, GA-62 and GA-

72 which quoted for PNG domestic connections higher than  

fixed vide note that 23.07.2018 for discussion on 14.08.2018  

to present their case as to why the bids submitted by them for  

PNG domestic connections be not considered unreasonably  

high. The Board also decided that under these  

circumstances, it would not be legally correct to reject their  

bids without providing them a chance to present their case.‖  

 

23. On 10 August 2018, a press release was issued by the Board. In  

pursuance of the decision which was taken by the Board, on 14 August 2018  

presentations were made before it by the three entities for GAs 61, 62 and 72  

which had quoted more than 100 per cent of the number of 2011 households.  

Apart from the above three GAs, the financial bid for Puducherry (GA 51) was  

opened on 18 August 2018. The bidder with the highest composite score for GA  

51 had also quoted more than 100 per cent of the total 2011 households and was  

called on 23 August 2018 for a presentation before the Board.   

 24. On 28 August 2018, an agenda note was prepared with respect to the  

Board‘s decision on four GAs: 51, 61, 62 and 72. The agenda note contained a  

summation of the submissions made by each of the four bidders who had been  

called upon to explain why their bids in excess of 100 per cent of the total number  

of households as per 2011 Census data should not be considered unreasonably  

high. The agenda note contained a tabulation of the percentage of PNG

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24    

penetration in the projected households in 2026 with respect to the number of  

households as per the 2011 Census. The comparative table is extracted below:

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25    

Sl  

No.  

GA  

ID  

GA PNG  

connections  

quoted by  

the bidder  

HH as per 2011  

Census i.e. Upper  

Limit of PNG  

Connections fixed  

by PNGRB  

Projected  

HH in 2026*  

PNG  

penetration  

in 2026 as  

per PNGRB  

upper limit  

PNG  

penetration  

in 2026 as  

per H1  

bidder  

A B C D E F G=(E/F)  

*100  

H=(D/F)  

*100  

1 51 Puducherry 2,75,000 2,31,513 3,91,852 59% 70%  

2 61 Kanchipuram 11,51,111 10,06,245 20,89,765 48% 55%  

3 62 Chennai  12,70,391 20,87,729    

 Tiruvallur  10,63,109 21,34,971    

 Total (Chennai &  

Tiruvallur)  

33,00,000 23,33,500 41,87,734 56% 79%  

4 72 Ranga Reddy (except  

authorised area)  

Presently, Medhchal,  

Rangareddy &  

Vikarabad Districts  

10,05,300 4,56,557 10,17,097 45% 99%

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25. The Board held a meeting on 29 August 2018. During the meeting, the  

Board approved the submission of the following three bidders who had made  

presentations before the Board with respect to the reasonableness of their  

quotes:  

―GA-51: Consortium of SKN Haryana City Gas Distribution  

Pvt. Ltd.  

GA-61: Consortium of AG&P LNG Marketing Pte Ltd. &  

Atlantic Gulf & Pacific Company of Manila Inc.   

GA-62: Torrent Gas Private Limited.‖  

 

The Board however rejected the submission of Torrent Gas Private Limited in  

respect of the reasonableness of its quote for GA 72 and decided to award the  

LOI to Megha Engineering & Infrastructure Private Limited, the entity with the  

highest composite score after Torrent Gas Private Limited was disqualified. The  

basis of the decision of the Board is contained in the following extracts from the  

minutes of 29 August 2018 meeting:  

―2. The Board further deliberated as under:  

(a) Following the earlier decisions, the three bidders i.e.  Torrent Gas Private Limited, Consortium of AG&P  LNG and SKN Haryana City Gas Private Limited  were called for discussion on 14

th  and 23

rd  August  

2018 to explain reasonableness of high PNG  connections quoted by them for the above GAs.    

(b) The Board referred to table in Para 15 of the agenda  note wherein quoted PNG domestic connections for  the above four GAs were compared with the upper  limit fixed vide noted dated 23.07.2018 and  projected households in 2026 (considering the  number of households as per 2011 Census and the  historical growth rate during 2001 to 2011 as per  census data of 2001 to 2011). It was observed that  penetration of PNG domestic connections based  upon upper limit fixed by PNGRB with reference to  projected number of households in 2026 varied from  45% to 59%. However, penetration of PNG

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27    

domestic connections based upon quoted PNG  connections with reference to projected number of  households in 2026 varied from 55% to 99%. The  variation between two sets of numbers is 7% to  54%.    

(c) The Board observed that the highest variation of  54% is in GA-72, which is based on untenable  assumptions made by the bidder as described in  Para 14.3 of the agenda note. Due to this,  10,05,300 PNG domestic connections quoted by the  bidder are 99% of the projected households by  PNGRB in 2026, which is unreasonably high. It was  also observed that for the remaining 3 GAs, the  variation between two sets of numbers given in para  15 of the Agenda note is 7% to 23% of projected  number of households in 2026 and PNG penetration  would be in the range of 55% to 79%.    

(d) The Board also referred to regulation 16(2) of CGD  Authorisation Regulations, which provides for rates  of pre-determined penalty for shortfall in achieving  cumulative work program targets for each contract  year. The entities bidding aggressive number of  PNG domestic connections would be liable to pay  pre-determined penalties under afore-mentioned  regulation 16(2).    

(e) In view of the above, it was decided to accept the  quoted PNG domestic connections and award the  Chennai & Tiruvallur District GA (GA-62) to Torrent  Gas Private Limited, Kanchipuram District GA (GA- 61) to Consortium of AG&P LNG Marketing Pte. Ltd  & Atlantic Gulf & Pacific Co. of Manila Inc. and  Puducherry District GA (GA-51) to Consortium of  SKN Haryana City Gas Distribution Pvt. Ltd. and  Chopra Electricals to the bidders with highest  composite score for respective GAs, where the  variation in two sets of numbers is in the range of 7  to 23%. Regarding Medchal, Rangareddy (except  area already authorised) & Vikarabad District GA  (GA-72), where the variation is around 54% and the  bid by Torrent Gas Pvt. Ltd. is based on untenable  assumptions and incorrect map, the bid of the entity  with highest composite score may be considered as  unreasonably high and rejected in terms of Clause  4.4.1 of ACBD. Accordingly, the GA may be  awarded to the bidder with second highest  composite score and LOI may be issued to Megha  Engineering & Infrastructure Pvt. Ltd. Subsequently,  on receipt of PBG, authorisation letter (Schedule D)  may be issued to the above entities.‖          

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The Board issued LOIs to SKN Haryana City Gas Distribution Private Limited and  

Chopra Electricals 11

, AG & P LNG Marketing Private Limited and Atlantic Gulf &  

Pacific Company of Manila 12

and Torrent Gas Private Limited on 30 August 2018  

as successful bidders for GAs 51, 61 and 62 respectively. On 6 September 2018  

Adani Gas Limited wrote to the Board requesting a copy of the decision with  

respect to the issuance of LOIs for the above three GAs. Subsequently, the  

Board uploaded the details of the successful bidders under the ninth CGD round  

on its website on 14 September 2018.   

 26. On 19 September 2018, Appeal No 292 of 2018 was instituted before the  

APTEL by Adani Gas Limited, aggrieved by:   

(i) The decision to award LOIs, in respect of the three GAs – 51  

(Puducherry District), 61 (Kanchipuram District), and 62 (Chennai &  

Tiruvallur Districts) on the ground that the successful bids were  

beyond the unreasonably high limit adopted by the Board; and   

(ii) The action of the Board in issuing the LOIs without uploading the  

decision on the website and without communicating it to Adani Gas  

Limited.        

Following the institution of proceedings by Adani Gas Limited, IMC Limited also  

instituted proceedings before the APTEL (Appeal No 323 of 2018) challenging  

the grant of authorisation by the Board in respect of GA 61. The prayers in both  

appeals were identical and the Tribunal heard both appeals together.   

 

                                           11

―SKN Haryana‖  12

―AG & P LNG‖  

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29    

27. During the pendency of the appeal, by an order dated 11 October 2018 the  

APTEL directed the Board to file an affidavit explaining its decision taken on 23  

July 2018 and the reasons on the basis of which bids were rejected, including on  

the ground of high and low quotes. In pursuance of the above order, the Board  

filed an affidavit by which it disclosed the Board Note dated 23 July 2018 together  

with a compilation of documents containing board agenda notes, minutes of  

meetings and press releases. On a perusal of the documents submitted by the  

Board, the competing standing of the various bidders is summarised below for  

convenience:   

GA No Area H1 Bidder H2 Bidder  

51 Puducherry SKN Haryana   Torrent Gas  

Private Limited  

61 Kanchipuram AG & P LNG  IMC Limited  

62  Chennai –  

Tiruvallur  

Torrent Gas Private  

Limited  Adani Gas Limited  

  In GA 51, Adani Gas Limited was the sixth highest bidder and in GA 61 Adani  

Gas Limited was the third highest bidder. In Appeal No 292 of 2018 Adani Gas  

Limited challenged the grant of authorisation in GAs 51, 61 and 62 and in Appeal  

No 323 of 2018 IMC Limited challenged the grant of authorisation in GA 61.   

 28. On 28 February 2019, the APTEL pronounced a split decision. While the  

Chairperson allowed the appeals filed by Adani Gas Limited and IMC Limited, the  

Member Technical (Petroleum and Natural Gas) dismissed the appeals. In view  

of the divergence of opinion between the Chairperson and Member Technical

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30    

(Petroleum and Natural Gas), the appeals were referred to the Judicial Member  

of the APTEL. The Judicial Member recused from hearing the appeal on 7 March  

2019, as a result of which proceedings were instituted before this Court. As noted  

earlier, the appeals pending before the APTEL have been transferred to this  

Court.   

 Analysis       29. Having set out the facts, we now turn to the issues raised by the present  

dispute before this Court. The first aspect which forms the subject matter of the  

controversy is the relevance of the 2011 Census data in the bidding process. The  

primary plank on which the appellants contend that the 2011 Census data was  

relevant to the bidding process was the reference to population/household figures  

derived from 2011 Census data in the map annexed to the Bid Document.  

 30. Dr A M Singhvi, learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of Adani Gas  

Limited, submitted that:  

(i) The map which was attached to the Bid Document did not only  

describe the land area but also the population and households  

comprised in it;  

(ii) The rationale for this was that the authorisation is to lay the CGD  

network in a defined land area and to service the defined  

households in that area;  

(iii) The figures for population and number of households in the map  

attached to the Bid Document were drawn from the 2011 Census;

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31    

(iv) In several areas out of the 86 GAs which were a part of the ninth  

round of bidding, certain parts of the GAs were excluded from the  

zone of authorisation;  

(v) Whenever certain parts of the GAs were excluded from the zone of  

authorisation, the population/household number was proportionally  

reduced to reflect the population/households as per the reduced  

area. Examples of the above are Surendranagar (GA-8); and  

Medchal-Ranga Reddy (GA-72).  

(vi) In GA 72, Medchal-Ranga Reddy:  

(a) The original map attached to the Bid Document showed the  

entire district with a corresponding number of households of  

13,47,118 according to the 2011 Census;  

(b) The Bid Document was amended to exclude the area in which  

an existing entity was already laying a CGD network as a  

result of which not only was the land area reduced but even  

the number of households was reduced to 4,56,557;  

(c) Torrent Gas Limited Private Limited, which was the highest  

bidder for the reduced area had bid 10,05,300 PNG  

connections, which worked out to 74.6 per cent of the original  

number of households (13,47,118) and 220 per cent of the  

reduced number of households (4,56,557);  

(d) The Board, at its meeting on 29 August 2018 rejected the H1  

bidder for GA 72 on the ground that the bid of 220 per cent of  

the households was unreasonably high; and

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32    

(e) The bid of the H1 bidder for GA 72 was in fact 99 per cent of  

the estimated households for 2026 but was yet rejected as  

the ‗unreasonably high‘ norm was with reference to the 2011  

census and not 100 per cent of the 2026 estimate because if  

it was the latter, the H1 bidder would have been declared to  

be successful.  

(vii) The map annexed to the Bid Document depicted not only the land  

area but also the population/number of households which were  

intrinsically intertwined in the bid parameters;  

(viii)  Clause 1.1.3 of the Bid Document mandated bidders to look at the  

―existing population‖. Hence, it is incorrect to suggest that the  

bidders had to keep in mind the population in the GAs in 2018. On  

the contrary, Clause 1.1.1 required bidders to bear in mind the  

population/households as given in the map annexed to the Bid  

Document; and   

(ix) The reference to ‗charge areas‘ in Clause 1.1.2 of the Bid Document  

means designated sub-areas which are part of the authorised GAs.  

The designation of ‗charge areas‘ is only to facilitate the Board in  

determining whether the authorised entity has created its network in  

all the GAs for which it is authorised.   

 31. Opposing the above submissions, Mr Paras Kuhad, learned Senior  

Counsel appearing on behalf of the Board submitted a written note, explaining

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33    

the amendments that were made to the CGD Authorisation Regulations after they  

were notified initially on 19 March 2008:  

 (A) 2008 CGD Authorisation Regulations:  

Regulation 7 of the 2008 CGD Authorisation Regulations prescribed a four-

fold criterion for bidding:   

(i) Criteria (a) was the lowness of the present value of the overall unit  

network tariff with a weightage of 40 per cent;  

(ii) Criteria (b) prescribed the lowness of the present value of the  

compression charge for CNG for dispensing in the CNG stations  

with a weightage of 10 per cent;  

(iii) Criteria (c) prescribed the highness of the present value of the inch-

kilometre of steel pipelines proposed to be laid in the CGD network  

during the period of exclusivity with a weightage of 20 per cent; and  

(iv) Criteria (d) prescribed the highness of the present value of the  

number of domestic customers proposed to be connected by PNG  

with a weightage of 30 per cent.    

Under the Regulations, no upper or lower ceiling was provided for bidding in  

respect of the Criteria (a) to (d) of Regulation 7.  

(B) 2013 Amendment to the CGD Authorisation Regulations 13

:   

(i) The 2013 amendment amended criteria (a) and (b) and substituted  

bidding criteria (c) and (d) with criteria (c);  

                                           13

21 June 2013

34

34    

(ii) The successful bidder was required to achieve a Minimum Work  

Programme 14

in respect of the PNG domestic connections and inch-

kilometres of steel pipeline;  

(iii) The minimum number of PNG domestic connections to be achieved  

within the first five years of authorisation was to be worked out by  

the Board. This was based on the total number of households to be  

calculated as per the basic data sheet of the respective districts of  

the GA and the population according to the latest census data;  

(iv) The weightage of bidding was shifted to 70 per cent for criteria (a)  

and 30 per cent for criteria (b). No weightage was given to PNG  

domestic connections and inch-kilometres of pipeline; and   

(v) The successful bidder was to achieve a target of 15 per cent by the  

second year, 50 per cent by the third year, seventy per cent by the  

fourth year and 100 per cent by the fifth year.  

 

(C) 2014 Amendment to the CGD Authorisation Regulations 15

:  

(i) The 2014 amendment substituted criteria (c) once again;  

(ii) Under the 2014 amendment, the Board was to work out the target  

for infrastructure for PNG domestic connections as 5 per cent of the  

households of the respective GAs to be achieved by the successful  

bidder during the first five years from the grant of authorisation; and   

(iii) No weightage was given to criteria (c) – PNG domestic connections  

and inch-kilometres.  

                                           14

―MWP‖  15

7 April 2014

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35    

(D) On 16 August 2016, the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas constituted  

a committee to examine alternative models for the bidding criteria to grant  

authorisation for CGD networks. The committee in its report recommended a  

MWP for PNG domestic connections at 7.5 per cent, within district  

headquarters/municipal limits. Prior to the ninth round, the MWP was fixed at 5  

per cent of the total households.   

(E) 2018 Amendment to the CGD Authorisation Regulations 16

:  

(i) The 2018 amendment substituted new criteria for bidding applicable  

to the ninth round. The present batch of appeals deals with the ninth  

round of bidding; and  

(ii) Under the new criteria applicable to the ninth round of CGD bidding,  

50 per cent weightage was given to PNG domestic connections.  

Moreover, no minimum or maximum limits were set for PNG  

domestic connections in the 2018 amendment.   

 Responding to the appellant‘s submissions on the binding nature of the Board  

Note dated 23 July 2018 and the legality of the Board‘s decision to hear only the  

highest bidder, Mr Paras Kuhad urged that:    

(i) The agenda note dated 9 August 2018 is not binding on the Board  

as it clearly states that the contents of the agenda note are subject  

to the deliberations and approval of the Board;   

(ii) Regulation 7 sets out five parameters on which the bids are to be  

evaluated. Once a bidder fulfils the criteria set out in Regulations 5  

                                           16

6 April 2018

36

36    

and 7 and emerges as the highest bidder, they have a statutory right  

to be selected;   

(iii) The CGD Authorisation Regulations do not set out criteria for  

determining ―unreasonably high or low‖ bids and no such criteria can  

be read into the Regulations and enforced on the Board;   

(iv) Clause 4.4.1 read with Addendum 1 explicitly states that the Board‘s  

power to determine ―unreasonably high or low‖ bids would be  

exercised on a ―case to case basis after considering the relevant  

factors‖;   

(v) The challenge made by the appellants is an adversarial challenge  

and not a Public Interest Litigation. The appellants cannot try and  

advance their case by relying on decisions taken in relation to  

separate GAs which are not presently under challenge; and   

(vi) The calculations made by the appellants with respect to the growth  

rate and projected number of households are based on irrelevant  

factors.  

 32. Mr Gopal Subramanium, learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of  

Torrent Gas Private Limited, supported the arguments urged by the Board and  

further submitted that:   

(i) Torrent Gas Limited has attended the hearing before the Board,  

explained its methodology in calculating its quoted number of PNG  

connections, and the quoted figure has been accepted by the Board  

as reasonable;  

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(ii) The Board Note dated 23 July 2018 had been formulated  

subsequent to the submission of bids. At the time of submitting its  

bid, the only criteria known to Torrent Gas Private Limited were  

those specified in Regulation 7 and the Bid Document, which did not  

prescribe a maximum number of PNG connections; and   

(iii) There is no condition in either the CGD Authorisation Regulations or  

the Bid Document which require the quoted number of PNG  

connections to be calculated on the basis of 2011 Census data.   

 33. Mr Gopal Sankaranarayanan, learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf  

of SKN Haryana, urged that:   

(i) Adani Gas Limited was neither the second nor third placed bidder in  

GA 51 on the basis of the composite score, and therefore has no  

standing to challenge the LOI granted to SKN Haryana for GA 51;   

(ii) Clause 14.2 of the First Addendum makes it clear that there were no  

fixed parameters on which an ―unreasonably high or low‖ bid would  

be determined, and specified that such determination would take  

place on a case to case basis; and   

(iii) According to the calculation of composite scores in Schedule C(1),  

the bidder with the highest number of PNG connections is at 100%  

and all other bidders are reduced in proportion to the highest  

bidder‘s score. If 100% of the 2011 Census data was a ‗hard upper  

limit‘ on the quoted number of PNG connections, the calculation in  

Schedule C(1) would be rendered redundant.  

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38    

34. Mr Kapil Sibal, learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of AG & P  

LNG, submitted as follows:   

(i) AG & P had quoted a figure of 11.51 lakh in its bid for GA 61.  

According to the 2011 Census figures, the number of households in  

GA 61 was only 10.06 lakhs. However, the Tamil Nadu Generation  

& Distribution Corporation Limited (the state electricity board) noted  

that as of 2018, there existed 15.91 lakh households in GA 61;   

(ii) In GA 37, Indian Oil Corporation had quoted a number of PNG  

connections below the 2% threshold and was the highest bidder.  

The Board awarded the GA to Bharat Gas Resource Limited, which  

had quoted above the 2% threshold. However, Indian Oil  

Corporation has not challenged this decision of the Board before the  

APTEL or any court, therefore the appellants cannot rely on the  

case of GA 37; and   

(iii) Each GA is a separate tender having its own unique geographical  

and socio-economic factors. Therefore, one cannot compare cases  

of other GAs with the GA of Kanchipuram where AG & P LNG has  

been awarded the authorisation.   

 35. The submission which has been urged on behalf of the appellants in  

regard to the relevance of the 2011 census data must first and foremost be  

assessed in the context of the CGD Authorisation Regulations as amended on 6  

April 2018. The Regulations postulate that bidders must submit both technical  

and financial bids. The procedure specified in Regulation 5 applies to an  

invitation by the Board for laying, building, operating or expanding a CDG

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39    

network. Regulation 5(6) requires the fulfilment of minimum eligibility criteria. For  

a technical bid to pass muster, the minimum eligibility criteria require the bidder to  

be qualified both with reference to technical and financial parameters. This is  

evident from Regulation 5(6) under which the Board is to scrutinise the bids of  

only those entities which fulfil the minimum eligibility criteria. The minimum  

eligibility criteria include the technical capability of the bidding entity to (i) lay and  

build; and (ii) operate and maintain a CGD network. Both of them are defined with  

reference to qualifying criteria. Besides the technical criteria, the minimum  

eligibility requirements under Regulation 5(6)(e) incorporate the financial ability to  

execute the project and to operate and maintain it in the authorised area. The  

financial criteria are defined with reference to the minimum net-worth of the  

bidding entity. The net-worth required is dependent on the population of the GA  

under the 2011 Census. The minimum net-worth required is specifically defined  

with reference to the 2011 census figures of population for the GA. The bidding  

entity is also required to submit a bid bond in the form of a performance bond  

guarantee. The quantum of the guarantee is dependent on the population of the  

GA.   

 36. Regulation 7 requires the Board to tabulate all financial bids which meet  

the minimum eligibility criteria, in accordance with the bidding criteria specified in  

the table. The Table incorporated in the Regulation provides five-fold criteria for  

the tabulation and comparison of financial bids. The five criteria are:   

(i) ‗Lowness‘ of transportation rate for CGD;  

(ii) ‗Lowness‘ for transportation rate for CNG;

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40    

(iii) ‗Highness‘ of the number of CNG stations to be installed in eight  

years from authorisation;  

(iv) ‗Highness‘ of the number of domestic PNG connections to be  

achieved within eight years of authorisation; and   

(v) ‗Highness‘ of inch-kilometre of steel pipeline to be laid within eight  

years of authorisation.   

The third and fourth criteria together account for 70 per cent of the total  

composite score. Among them, the fourth criterion – ‗highness‘ of the number of  

domestic PNG connections accounts for 50 per cent of the total composite score.  

Significantly, the bidding criteria in Regulation 7 are not linked to the 2011  

Census figures. There are two significant facets of Regulation 7:  

(i) The absence of a linkage of the projected number of domestic PNG  

connections with the 2011 Census data; and   

(ii) The absence of a cap or ceiling on the ‗highness‘ norm both in  

relation to the third and the fourth criteria (iii and iv above).   

 37. Regulation 7 (1)(b) requires the successful bidder to achieve the target in  

terms of an annual work programme within eight contract years. The programme  

is distributed between the first and eighth years for PNG connections‘, CNG  

stations‘ and Inch-kilometres of steel pipelines. For PNG connections, the  

successful bidder must complete 10 per cent of the work programme at the end  

of the second year, 20 per cent  at the end of the third year, 30 per cent at the  

end of fourth year, 40 per cent at the end of the fifth year, 60 per cent at the end  

of the sixth year, 80 per cent at the end of the seventh year and 100 per cent at

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41    

the end of the eighth year. Under Regulation 7(3), a bidding entity with the  

highest composite score in terms of the criteria specified in sub-regulation (1) of  

Regulation 7 is to be declared as the successful bidder.  

  38. The provisions contained in the 2008 CGD Authorisation Regulations, as  

amended on 6 April 2018, indicate that where a specific linkage was sought with  

reference to the 2011 Census data, a clear and categorical provision was made  

to that effect. Such provisions are found in regard to the financial capability of a  

bidder as part of the minimum eligibility criteria in Regulation 5(6)(e) and the  

extent of the performance bond in Regulation 5(6)(h).   

 39. Absent a condition in Regulation 7 linking the ‗highness‘ of the number of  

PNG connections to be achieved within eight years from the date of authorisation  

with the 2011 Census data, it would be contrary to basic principles of  

interpretation to read such a restriction into the CGD Authorisation Regulations. A  

conditionality which has not been incorporated in Regulation 7 cannot be  

introduced as a matter of construction. The court must first and foremost read the  

Regulation in accordance with its plain and natural meaning. There is evidently a  

reason why Regulation 7 did not introduce a ceiling or provide for a linkage with  

the Census data of 2011. Consumers or users, as the case may be, in a CGD  

network broadly comprise of four categories namely:  

(i) Domestic;  

(ii) Commercial;  

(iii) Industrial; and  

(iv) Vehicular.

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42    

40. The Board has submitted with justification that in a model of  

cross/subsidisation, the viability of the project has to be perceived from a twenty-  

five-year perspective. Gains in one category of users can offset the losses in  

another category. The CGD Authorisation Regulations are intended to subserve  

the object of establishing the infrastructure necessary for setting up an  

operational CGD network. In creating the infrastructure, the successful entity is  

contractually bound to set up a project for the future. The infrastructure so  

created would be of service to consumers or, as the case may be, users.  

Infrastructural projects cater to future needs and can legitimately be forward  

looking. It is from this perspective that except for the tariff in the first two bidding  

criteria of Regulation 7 (the transportation rates for CGD and CNG), no ceiling  

was provided by the Board for the criteria set out in Regulation 7. More  

particularly, Regulation 7(3) provided for a mandate to tabulate and compare the  

bids of all entities which had met the minimum eligibility criteria upon their  

qualifying in a competitive bidding process. The Regulations did not contemplate  

the disqualification of a bidder with reference to a norm which would limit a bid to  

100 per cent of the population figures provided by the 2011 Census data. For the  

Board to stipulate an absolute norm to that effect, when it has not been  

specifically incorporated in the Regulations would have rendered the decision  

making process vulnerable to a challenge on the ground that it was not consistent  

with Regulation 7.  

 41. Now it is in this background, that it becomes necessary to evaluate the Bid  

Document. Clause 1.1.1 incorporates a reference to the GA as depicted in the  

map set out in Annexure-1, for which the Board was inviting bids for the grant of

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43    

an authorisation to develop a CGD network. The main plank of the submissions  

of the appellants is that the map contained a reference to population and  

household figures on the basis of the 2011 Census. Clause 1.1.3 places the  

responsibility on the bidder to obtain information about the present gas supply  

availability, the pipeline connectivity and the existing customers in the GA.  

Significantly, the scope of work in Clause 1.2 required bidding entities ―to lay,  

build, operate or expand the CDG networks‖ to meet the requirement of natural  

gas ―in domestic, commercial and industrial segments including natural gas in the  

vehicular segment in the said Geographical Area to be authorised.‖ Bidders are  

required under Clause 2.1.1 to examine the contents of the Bid Document  

including instructions, terms and conditions and regulations of the Board. The  

bidder was required to carefully study the GA and the charge area before  

submitting the bid. In other words, bidders were on notice of the actions required  

to be taken to implement the Regulations. The Bid Document necessarily had to  

be in conformity with the CGD Authorisation Regulations. The map, at best was a  

compendium of the latest official record of the GA. The map did not dictate how  

the number of domestic PNG connections was to be calculated. There is no such  

indication particularly in Clause 1 of the Bid Document where the map is  

referenced. The mere attachment of a map to the Bid Document would not result  

in the imposition of conditions of eligibility or qualification. These have been  

provided in the Regulations which have a statutory character. The depiction of  

the GA in a map attached to the bid document does not over-ride the specific  

requirements of the bidding criteria as defined in Regulation 7.           

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44    

42. The next basis of the challenge by the appellants is that the decision which  

was taken in the form of the Board Note dated 23 July 2018 had categorically  

stipulated a range of 2 per cent to 100 per cent of the number of households as  

per the 2011 Census as the minimum/maximum thresholds to judge the  

reasonableness of the bids. It has been urged that despite this, the decision of  

the Board dated 10 August 2018 virtually reversed the earlier decision recorded  

in the Board Note of 23 July 2018, thereby tainting the decision-making process  

with arbitrariness. The nuances to this challenge have been brought out in the  

submissions of Dr AM Singhvi, Mr Vikas Singh, learned Senior Counsel on behalf  

of Adani Gas Limited and Mr KV Vishwanathan and Mr Buddy Ranganathan,  

learned Senior Counsel on behalf of IMC Limited and can broadly be catalogued  

in the form of the following points:  

 (i) The 2 - 100 per cent criterion based on the 2011 Census data is the  

basis on which the bids for 79 out of 86 GAs were evaluated;  

(ii) In respect of the bids for four GAs (out of the remaining seven GAs)  

where the highest bidder had bid a number of PNG connections  

below 2 per cent of the number provided by the 2011 Census, those  

four bidders were furnished with an opportunity to improve their bids  

and match the 2 per cent threshold;  

(iii) It is only for the three bidders with the highest composite scores in  

GAs 51, 61 and 62 that the bids were evaluated with reference to  

the projected number of households in 2026;  

(iv) For example, in GA-62 (Chennai-Tiruvallur), there were ten bidders  

of whom the bids of nine were evaluated with reference to the 2011

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45    

Census data on the number of households, whereas the bid of one  

bidder (Torrent Gas Private Limited) has been evaluated with  

reference to the number of projected households in 2026;  

(v) The agenda note dated 9 August 2018 which was approved by three  

out of the four Board members recommended that Torrent Gas  

Private Limited was not qualified and Adani Gas Limited be declared  

as the successful bidder. Yet on 10 August 2018, the four Board  

members including the three who had approved the Board Note  

concluded that, though the lower and upper thresholds were  

decided ―the same need not be a mechanical exercise‖;  

(vi) Neither the Bid Document nor the CGD Authorisation Regulations  

contain any provision allowing the Board to call upon bidders to  

improve their bids;  

(vii) The Board Note dated 23 July 2018 which defined the minimum and  

maximum threshold (2-100 per cent of the number of households as  

per the 2011 Census) without any caveat or provision for relaxation  

has been virtually reversed on 10 August 2018, thereby upsetting  

the level playing field between bidders;  

(viii) The only reason for the reversal of the decision, which is that the  

criterion need not be a mechanical exercise is not supported by  

reasons and this volte face introduced un-canalized subjectivity in  

the process which was earlier considered to be objective and  

definite;

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46    

(ix) The Board decision dated 28 August 2018 wrongly adopts the 2011  

Census number as 23,33,500 whereas in the Board Note, the  

number of households as per the 2011 census is 21,01,931;   

(x) There has been a breach of the principles of natural justice for the  

following reasons:  

(a) In the Board decision dated 10 August 2018, it was decided to  

give a hearing to all affected parties;  

(b) The Board undertook the exercise of hearing only Torrent  

Gas Limited, AG & P LNG and SKN Haryana; and  

(c) The violation of natural justice lies in the fact that these ―not-

qualified‖ bidders were heard on why their bids were  

reasonable despite being above 100 per cent of the 2011  

Census household data. Neither Adani Gas Limited nor any of  

the other unsuccessful bidders were heard on why the bids of  

the ―not-qualified‖ bidders were actually unreasonable.   

(xi) This Court is justified in reviewing the process adopted by the Board  

in evaluating the bids for the ninth round of CGD bidding. It is well  

settled that judicial review cannot be denied even in contractual  

matters to prevent arbitrariness.  

 43. Our analysis of the CGD Authorisation Regulations, as amended on 6 April  

2018, as explained earlier, reveals that the Regulations did not contain any  

stipulation determining a range of 2 to 100 per cent of the number of households  

under the 2011 Census as the criterion to evaluate bids. The Regulations in fact  

do not link the ‗highness‘ factor of domestic PNG connections to the 2011

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47    

Census data. In Clause 4.4.1 of the Bid Document, the Board reserved to itself  

the right to reject any unreasonably high or low bid. In Addendum-1 to the Bid  

Document, the Board clarified to all prospective bidders that the evaluation of  

whether a bid was unreasonably low or high would be conducted on a case to  

case basis at the time of bid evaluation.   

 44. It is in the above background that the Board Note dated 23 July 2018 must  

be assessed. The Board Note was formulated after the last date for the  

submission of bids. The criterion which the Board Note proposed had not been  

notified to bidders. Bidders were not on notice that this would be the basis on  

which their bid would be evaluated. The Board Note took notice of Clause 4.4.1  

of the Bid Document and stipulated that since technical bids for some GAs were  

about to be evaluated, it was necessary to decide upon the reasonableness of  

the bidding parameters which constituted the work programme. It was in this  

background that the Board Note proposed that; ―…2 per cent of total households  

(as per the 2011 Census data) may be considered as minimum‖. As regards the  

maximum, the Board note proposed that:   

―beyond 100 per cent households may be treated as  

unreasonably quote‖  

 

(Emphasis supplied)  

   

The terminology adopted by the Board Note indicates that the 2-100 per cent  

range was not laid down as an absolute or inflexible basis for disqualifying bids  

below the minimum or in excess of the maximum. On the contrary, the use of the  

expression ―may be‖ is one indicator that a bid which was below 2 per cent or in  

excess of 100 per cent may trigger the exercise of the power which the Board

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48    

had reserved to itself in clause 4.4.1 of the Bid Document. On its plain terms, the  

Board Note cannot be construed to have laid down an absolute norm by which  

bids quoting below the minimum of 2 per cent or above the ceiling of 100 per cent  

of the number of households under the 2011 Census data would automatically be  

rejected as unreasonable.   

 45. If the Board Note of 23 July 2018 were to be construed in the manner in  

which the learned Senior Counsel for the appellants urged, the automatic  

disqualification of bidders based on a criterion introduced by the Board Note  

would raise serious doubts about its fairness and legality. This is because the  

Board Note was not notified to bidders as a basis for the evaluation of bids before  

the date for the submission of the bids had closed. To disqualify a bidder on the  

basis of a criterion which was not notified and of which bidders had no knowledge  

would be arbitrary and would constitute an infraction of Article 14. The Board was  

thus correct in determining that the automatic disqualification of a bid on the basis  

of a criterion specified in the Board Note (which was never notified to the bidders)  

would not be ―legally correct‖. Hence, it would be reasonable to interpret the  

Board Note dated 23 July 2018 as being the formulation of a guideline for the  

Board. As a guideline in the process of evaluation, the decision taken by the  

Board on 23 July 2018 was not to the effect that every bid below 2 per cent or  

above 100 per cent would necessarily stand disqualified. Consistently with the  

use of the word ‗may be‘, as already noticed, the decision of the Board meant  

that the power which the Board reserved to itself in Clause 4.4.1 could be  

invoked if it came to the conclusion that the bid had not been justified to be  

reasonable. In other words, the breaching of the range of 2-100 per cent was a

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49    

trigger for the Board to scrutinise the bid and determine whether the power under  

Clause 4.4.1 should be invoked. Hence, the course of action which the Board  

followed of calling upon the bidders with the highest composite scores in GAs 51,  

61 and 62 to justify their bids in terms of their reasonableness cannot be faulted.  

On the contrary, if the Board had rejected these bids solely on the ground that  

they were above the limit of 100 per cent of households under the 2011 Census  

data, the decision would have been seriously flawed for having applied a criterion  

which was not a part of the Regulations, was not embodied in the Bid Document  

and in any event, was not notified to bidders before they had submitted their bids.   

 46. Another limb of the submission is that, with respect to GA 62, three out of  

the four members of the Board had in the Board agenda dated 9 August 2018  

recommended that Torrent Gas Private Limited was not qualified and that Adani  

Gas Limited be declared as the successful bidder. This, in our view, is an  

incorrect reading of the agenda note. What this submission misses is the last  

paragraph of the Board agenda note which states:  

―20. This Agenda note has been prepared by Authorization  

Division, concurred by Member (I&T) & Member (C&M) and  

approved by Chairperson for deliberations and approval of  

the Board.‖  

 

(Emphasis supplied)  

 

The agenda note dated 9 August 2018 was a recommendation which was  

prepared on the basis of the 2–100 per cent criterion contained in the Board Note  

dated 23 July 2018. Obviously in the light of that decision, a recommendation  

was made which was still to be deliberated upon by the Board as a body. When  

the Board met on 10 August 2018, it correctly came to the conclusion that the

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lower and upper thresholds were not to be applied mechanically to disqualify  

bidders. This decision, as we have indicated earlier, was justified not only by the  

terms of the Board Note dated 23 July 2018 but was intrinsic to a fair exercise of  

power by the Board. The Board decided that it would call the bidders with the  

highest composite score to explain the reasonableness of their bids. This was a  

fair opportunity which was granted to the bidders who had the highest composite  

score to justify the basis of their computation of projected households over the  

eight-contract years.   

 47. There is no merit in the submission that there was a breach of the  

principles of natural justice in calling only the bidders with the highest composite  

score to explain the reasonableness of their bids. None of these bidders was  

being called upon to revise or improve their bids. In terms of the CGD  

Authorisation Regulations, the bidder with the highest composite score has to be  

declared as the successful bidder. If despite having the highest composite score,  

a bidder was being considered for rejection by the Board, it was that bidder who  

was justifiably called to explain the reasonableness of the bid. The other bidders  

had no locus to participate in the process. It is a settled principle of law that the  

rules of natural justice are attracted where a decision affects a right of a party  

against whom the decision has to be made. After the composite score of all  

bidders is calculated, the second highest bidder has no rights vis-à-vis the  

highest bidder or the Board unless the method of calculating the highest  

composite score itself is impugned. Calling upon the bidders with the highest  

composite score to explain the reasonableness of their bid did not alter the  

composite score of the H1 bidders or any other bidder for the same GA. The

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question of hearing any other bidder would have arisen only if the H1 bidder  

stood disqualified, and the bidder with the next highest composite score also  

breached the 2-100 per cent range, thereby warranting scrutiny from the Board.  

In the present situation, when the Board decided to call the bidders with the  

highest composite score in order to allow them an opportunity to explain  

reasonableness of their bid, the administrative decision taken by the Board  

cannot be faulted as being in violation of the principles of natural justice.   

 48.  At the 82

nd  meeting of the Board, which was held on 29 August 2018, the  

reasonableness of the bids submitted for GAs 51, 61, 62 and 72 came up for  

consideration.  In GA 62 (Chennai-Tiruvallur) Torrent Gas Private Limited, relied  

on the current LPG domestic connections (41,73,073) according to the statistics  

of the Tamil Nadu government. This was extrapolated until 2026 taking the  

growth rate at 5 per cent per annum. On this basis, Torrent Gas Private Limited  

as the H1 bidder justified before the Board its quoted figure of PNG connections  

of thirty-three lakhs. For GA 61 (Kanchipuram), AG & P LNG explained that its  

computation was based on:  

(i) The urbanisation rates in the Kanchipuram district;  

(ii) Extrapolations of the number of households based on historical  

growth rates;  

(iii) The twin city status of Chennai and Kanchipuram; and   

(iv) The per capita income growth in Kanchipuram district.  

 

On this basis, AG & P LNG justified its number for projected PNG connections.  

For GA-51 (Puducherry), SKN Haryana based its computation on the compound

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52    

yearly growth of households in the previous twenty years. Based on this growth  

rate, the bidder calculated the projected households till 2026 and accordingly  

presented this computation to the Board when called upon.   

 49. In its minutes dated 29 August 2018, the Board noted that the four GAs:  

51, 61, 62 and 72 were compared with the upper limit fixed by the agenda note  

dated 23 July 2018 and projected households in 2026. The penetration of PNG  

domestic connections based on the upper limit fixed by the Board with reference  

to the projected number of households in 2026 varied from 45 per cent to 59 per  

cent. However, the penetration of PNG domestic connections based on quoted  

PNG connections with reference to the projected number of households in 2026  

varied from 55 per cent to 99 per cent. The variation between the two sets of  

numbers was between 7 per cent to 54 per cent. The Board noted that it was in  

GA 72 where the highest variation of 54 per cent took place. The bid submitted  

by Torrent Gas Private Limited for GA 72 was consequently rejected. The Board  

observed that the computation for GA 72 by Torrent Gas Private Limited was  

based on untenable assumptions as described in para 14.3 of the agenda note.  

According to these assumptions, the PNG domestic connections quoted by the  

Torrent Gas Private Limited was 99 per cent of the projected households by 2026  

which was taken as an unreasonably high penetration figure. However, for the  

remaining three GAs, the variation was between 7 per cent to 23 per cent of the  

projected households in 2026, and PNG penetration would be in the range of 55  

per cent to 79 per cent. This exercise was carried out by the Board to enable it to  

consider the reasonableness of the bids. Torrent Gas Limited, whose bid was  

accepted for GA 62, was however not considered for acceptance for GA 72 since

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its computation of the number of projected households and penetration rate was  

deemed unreasonable. In our view, the Board has certainly given a possible  

basis for coming to the conclusion that the bids submitted by the bidders with the  

highest composite score for GAs 51, 61 and 62 were reasonable and ought not to  

be rejected.   

 50. The agenda note dated 9 August 2018 merely tabled discussion on the  

disputed GAs. The highest bidders for GAs 61 and 62 were heard by the Board  

on 14 August 2018. The highest bidder for GA 51 was heard by the Board on 23  

August 2018. The final decision to award authorisation in GAs 51, 61 and 62 to  

AG & P LNG, Torrent Gas Private Limited and SKN Haryana (the highest  

bidders) respectively was finally taken by the Board in its meeting on 29 August  

2018. This decision was taken after hearing the bidders on whether their bids  

were reasonable or not. The Board did not reject all other bidders or  

presumptively announce these entities as successful bidders before making a  

determination as to the reasonableness of their bids. In light of this chronology of  

events, at no point did the Board reverse its decision with respect to the GAs in  

question.     

 51. The appeals before APTEL pertained to GAs 51, 61 and 62. The present  

proceedings were not in the nature of a public interest litigation instituted under  

Article 226 of the Constitution before a High Court challenging the entirety of the  

tendering process. Both before this Court and APTEL, it was contended that the  

Board had rejected bids in other GAs which were not-qualified on the ground that  

they were either below 2 per cent or above 100 per cent of the number of

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households as per the 2011 Census figures. The Member Technical (Petroleum  

and Natural Gas) at APTEL examined the submission in paragraph 60 of the  

decision and held:                                            

―60. Though the appeal pertains to only GAs, 51,61 & 62, the  

Appellant also submits that the Board rejected 37 numbers of  

bids which were not qualified because their bids were below  

2% and higher than 100% of 2011 census figures as per the  

Board‘s Press Release dated 10.08.2018 uploaded in its  

website. Though, the instant appeal also strictly pertains to  

only highness of PNG domestic connections, still for the sake  

of completeness, let me understand the status of these bids.  

On clarification, the Board has stated that there were only 9  

bids with H-1 bidders quoting below 2% and above 100%  

limits of 2011 census. These 9 bids were accordingly  

highlighted to the Board, and final decisions were taken on  

these 9 bids by the Board after proper application of mind,  

hearing the parties and taking an objective decision. Out of 9  

bids, 4 bids having lower than 2% connections were accepted  

after raising their bids through discussions with the bidders,  

otherwise, these GAs would have gone dry. In GA-37, IOC‘s  

bid was rejected because of lower than 2% quote, but this  

decision of the Board has not been challenged by IOC. Out of  

the remaining 4 GAs where H-1 bidders quoted more than  

100% of PNG connections of 2011 census household  

numbers for 3 GAs (51, 61 & 62), H-1 bidders were declared  

successful bidders after hearing them on their  

reasonableness of quotes. For the 4th GA (GA No. 72), the  

bid of the H-1 bidder who is the R-2 in the instant case was  

rejected having found its bid unreasonable and the GA was  

awarded to the next highest bidder and the H-1 bidder has  

not challenged this decision.‖  

 

 This clarification by the Board as well as the findings which have been recorded  

by the Member Technical (Petroleum and Natural Gas) commends itself for  

acceptance.   

 52. In addition to their submissions with respect to the binding nature of the 2 –  

100 per cent range set out in the Board Note dated 23 July 2018, the appellants

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55    

also argued that the Compounded Annual Growth Rate 17

considered by the  

Board for the period between 2001 and 2011 was higher than the actual annual  

growth rate, leading the Board to project a higher number of households for 2026  

than may actually exist. It was alleged that the Board used the figure of 23,33,500  

as the number of households existing in 2011 instead of 21,01,931 in calculating  

the growth rate, resulting in an inflated growth rate. This high growth rate,  

according to the appellants, led the Board to accept the submissions made by  

Torrent Gas Private Limited in justifying an ―unreasonably high‖ quote for the  

number of households for the year 2026.    

 53. In his judgement, the Member Technical noted that the appellant had in  

fact calculated the CAGR using overall population growth instead of using  

household growth. Evidently, for the purpose of projecting the number of PNG  

connections within a GA, it is the number of households and not the overall  

population that is relevant as each household is unlikely to have more than one  

PNG connection. Moreover, as neither the CGD Regulations nor the Bid  

Document required the number of projected households to be calculated on the  

basis of 2011 Census data, the decision of the Board to accept the justification  

provided by the bidders cannot be attacked on the ground that the figures  

provided did not strictly match the numbers extrapolated from the 2011 Census  

data. Lastly, the Member Technical (Petroleum and Natural Gas) observed:   

―51. … Moreover, the calculations have been done by an  

expert body (the Board) which has been constituted as per  

Statutory Act. In addition, the estimates on future PNG  

domestic connections made by the 3 bidders based on  

various parameters are only estimates. These are not  

meant to be arrived at by any specified formula or direct  

                                           17

―CAGR‖

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mathematical precision. The power to weed out  

unreasonably high or low quote is only an enabling  

power and not a yardstick or parameter for evaluation.‖    

 

(Emphasis supplied)  

 

The power granted to the Board under Clause 14.2 of the Bid Document is an  

enabling clause that allows the Board to apply its mind to a quote and determine  

its reasonableness. The quotes submitted by all bidders with respect to the  

projected number of households in 2026 are admittedly estimates. Similarly, the  

Board‘s own determination of a baseline for comparing the reasonableness of  

various quotes is also an estimate. Therefore, the Board‘s use of the baseline  

figure and its consequent acceptance of the reasonability of a quote cannot be  

faulted because it did not strictly adhere to one particular methodology of arriving  

at a number of projected households unless the methodology used is arbitrary,  

having no correlation with the result sought to be achieved. We therefore approve  

of the finding of the Member Technical with respect to the calculation of the  

number of households.    

 54. The present batch of appeals arises from two divergent opinions of the  

Chairperson and the Member Technical (Petroleum and Natural Gas) of the  

APTEL. Several arguments urged by the appellants before us find voice in the  

opinion of the Chairperson. Therefore, for the sake of completeness it is  

necessary to briefly advert to the opinion of the Chairperson allowing the appeals.  

The Chairperson observed as follows:   

―136. … On 23.07.2018 certain criteria/parameters were  

indicated by this so called Evaluation Committee in the  

Agenda Note. … This indicates that the exercise so far as  

criteria/ parameters was uniform for all the bids. …. The  

report on Agenda Note dated 09.08.2018, in fact,  

recommended that the highest bidders of GA 51, 61, and

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62 were disqualified since their quote of PNG connections  

were beyond 100% of the total households of 2011 census.  

… However, the Minutes of the Board dated 10.08.2018  

indicate that the four members of the Board out of which three  

had approved Agenda Note, changed their opinion so far as  

disqualification of highest bidder of these three GAs 51, 61  

and 62. It‘s also noticed from the affidavit of the Board filed  

09.11.2018 that the Board has correctly applied the  

unreasonable low criteria to all the bidders whose bid  

was below 2%, but surprisingly the bids which were  

beyond the limit of 100% of 2011 census, the Board  

thought it fit to relax the criteria by calling the high bidders  

for negotiation. If the Board thought it fit to hear the  

affected parties, then it ought to have invited all the  

affected parties of the said GA i.e., all the bidders who  

stand to lose the bid, since such procedure was exercised  

so far as unreasonably low criteria to all bidders who quoted  

below 2% of 2011 census. Assessment of reasonability of  

a bid cannot be equated with the concept of rejection of a  

bid as not qualified for a particular criteria. Reasonability  

of a bid has reference to subjective assessment/satisfaction.  

The assessment of a bid based on the available material  

would amount to objective assessment.‖  

(Emphasis supplied)    

It is evident from the above extract that the Chairperson‘s findings are based on  

three key assumptions:   

(i) The Board Note dated 23 July 2018 was binding on the Board and  

the agenda note dated 9 August 2018 was evidence of the Board  

Note‘s binding nature;   

(ii) Because the Board disqualified certain other bidders by applying the  

2 – 100 per cent range, it was bound to do so against the successful  

bidders in GAs 51, 61 and 52; and   

(iii) Because the assessment of reasonability was a ―subjective  

assessment‖, the Board was obligated to hear other bidders in the  

disputed GAs before declaring successful bidders.   

55. As noted previously, on a bare construction of the Board Note dated 23  

July 2018 and the fact that the Board Note was formulated after the last date for

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the submission of bids, the Board Note did not set out absolute criteria for  

disqualification of bids. The agenda note dated 9 August merely tabled a  

proposal to apply the criteria of 2-100 per cent range but the Board did not  

subsequently adopt this course of action, a decision within its power and indeed  

necessary to preserve the integrity of the bidding process. Having established  

that the Board Note was not an absolute binding criteria, and the Tribunal was  

approached only with respect to GAs 51, 61 and 62, the Board‘s treatment of  

other GAs cannot be decisive in determining the legality of the authorisations  

granted in GAs 51, 61 and 62, especially where the Board‘s actions in respect of  

these other GAs have not been independently challenged. Lastly, the  

Chairperson has construed the assessment of the reasonability of the highest  

bidder‘s quote as a decision affecting the rights and liabilities of all other bidders  

for the GAs, thus requiring them to be heard. As noted previously, the  

assessment of the reasonability of the bid was a matter solely between the  

highest bidder and the Board. Such an assessment would not alter the scores of  

the highest bidder vis-à-vis the scores of the other bidders. The sole question  

was whether the highest bidder‘s quote was reasonable, and the power to  

determine such reasonability resided solely with the Board by virtue of Clause  

14.2 of the Bid Document. Thus, the presence and hearing of other bidders was  

not necessary.  

 56. For the above reasons, we disagree with the opinion of the Chairperson  

and concur with the view which was taken by the Member Technical (Petroleum  

and Natural Gas) to dismiss the appeals. The Appeals are accordingly dismissed.

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Transferred Cases Nos 27 of 2019 and 26 of 2019 are disposed of. There shall  

no order as to costs.   

 57. Pending application(s), if any, shall stand disposed of.    

 

 

 …….………….…………………...........................J.                             [DR DHANANJAYA Y CHANDRACHUD]  

       

……..…..…..…....…........……………….…........J.                            [HEMANT GUPTA]   

   New Delhi;   February 17, 2020.