India must explore oil "at any cost" and diversify energy sources: ONGC Chief
New Delhi [India], April 10, 2026 (ANI): The closure of the Strait of Hormuz, once unthinkable, has become a reality, and India must treat it as a wake-up call to transform its energy security strategy from the ground up, Arun Kumar Singh, Chairman and CEO of Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC), said on Thursday.
Speaking at a high-level session titled 'Reimagining Secure Energy Supply Chains in Light of New Geopolitical Challenges', organised jointly by the Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board (PNGRB) and Indraprastha Gas Limited (IGL), Singh delivered an unusually blunt assessment of India's energy vulnerabilities, and what the country must do urgently to address them.
"In my 40 years in oil and gas, I never imagined this kind of a crisis would happen in our world. We never thought a day would come when the Strait of Hormuz would be closed," he said.
He warned that such shocks are no longer once-in-a-generation events. "We should be prepared for more and more of this. Every country should do whatever is required to protect its sovereignty," he said.
"We should explore oil in our country at any cost. We must have exploration in a big way," he said, making clear that energy self-sufficiency must now be treated as a national security imperative, not merely a commercial exercise.
"We are a society that works hard when exam dates are announced," he added.
The message was unmistakable, India cannot afford to wait for the next crisis before acting.
Singh laid out a sweeping agenda for energy resilience, built around the principle of diversification at every level.
On LNG, he noted that India had managed to build some buffer. "LNG -- we got a little saved," he said. But on LPG, the picture was far more troubling.
He urged to accelerate the shift of Indian households from LPG to Piped Natural Gas.
Singh also raised a question that is increasingly being asked in global energy circles. Who will now invest in above-ground energy infrastructure in the Middle East?
"Who will invest in above-ground facilities in the Middle East now?" he asked, suggesting that the geopolitical instability has not just disrupted supply chains today but could impair the region's long-term production capacity, with serious consequences for import-dependent nations like India.
"A unipolar world is now a reality, and we must take this with much gravitas," he said.
Singh was not alone in sounding the alarm. Gurdeep Singh, Chairman and Managing Director of NTPC, echoed the call for greater domestic resource utilisation, flagging a different but equally pressing contradiction in India's energy mix.
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