Fri, 10 Jul 2026
05:32:47 am
Synopsis
Delhi High Court allows enforcement of $99 million arbitral awards in favour of Vedanta and Ravva Oil, rejecting the Centre's objections in the long-running Ravva oil field dispute.

The Delhi High Court has allowed the enforcement of foreign arbitral awards worth $99 million in favour of Vedanta Limited and Ravva Oil, rejecting the Central government's objections. The ruling directs the Centre to release the amount and return bank guarantees within eight weeks, bringing a long-running dispute over the Ravva oil field production-sharing contract closer to resolution.
The Delhi High Court has cleared the way for Vedanta Limited and Singapore-based Ravva Oil to receive $99 million awarded through international arbitration in a dispute linked to the Ravva oil field in the Krishna-Godavari Basin.
Justice Jasmeet Singh dismissed the Central government's objections to enforcing the foreign arbitral awards and ordered that the bank guarantees furnished by the companies be released within eight weeks.
The decision relates to a 2004 partial arbitral award and a 2016 final arbitral award, both issued by an arbitration tribunal seated in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
The dispute originated from a Production Sharing Contract (PSC) signed in 1994 between the Government of India, ONGC, Ravva Oil, Videocon Petroleum and Cairn Energy India (now part of Vedanta).
The arbitration centred on the interpretation of the "ONGC Carry Issue", specifically whether payments made by private partners to ONGC could be included while calculating the Post Tax Rate of Return (PTRR) under the production-sharing agreement.
After years of arbitration and litigation in Malaysia, the awards were upheld by both the Malaysian Court of Appeal and the Malaysian Federal Court.
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The Union government argued that enforcing the awards would violate India's public policy, claiming the arbitral tribunal had effectively rewritten the production-sharing contract and reduced the government's share of profit petroleum by approximately $99 million.
The government also challenged the petition on limitation grounds and argued that the arbitral tribunal had become functus officio before issuing the final award.
However, the Delhi High Court rejected all objections, stating that the issues had already been settled by the Supreme Court's 2020 judgment in Union of India vs Vedanta Ltd.
The Court observed that an enforcing court cannot reassess the merits of a foreign arbitral award and that the Arbitration and Conciliation Act permits only limited grounds for refusing enforcement.
| Particular | Details |
|---|---|
| Court | Delhi High Court |
| Judge | Justice Jasmeet Singh |
| Award Amount | $99 Million |
| Beneficiaries | Vedanta Limited & Ravva Oil |
| Arbitration Seat | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia |
| Government Objections | Rejected |
| Bank Guarantees | To be released within 8 weeks |
The ruling removes a long-standing legal hurdle for Vedanta and Ravva Oil and reinforces India's pro-arbitration legal framework by recognising foreign arbitral awards.
For Vedanta, the decision could improve cash flows through the release of the awarded amount and bank guarantees while reducing legal uncertainty surrounding the decades-old Ravva oil field dispute.
Although the judgment is positive for the company, investors will also watch whether the government decides to pursue any further legal remedies.
The Delhi High Court has upheld the enforcement of $99 million in foreign arbitral awards in favour of Vedanta and Ravva Oil, rejecting all objections raised by the Central government. The judgment directs the release of bank guarantees within eight weeks and marks another significant legal victory for Vedanta in the long-running Ravva oil field arbitration dispute.
The Court held that the issues raised by the Centre had already been decided by the Supreme Court in 2020 and found no valid grounds to refuse enforcement of the foreign arbitral awards.
The arbitral awards are worth approximately $99 million.
The dispute involved the interpretation of the Production Sharing Contract (PSC) for the Ravva oil field and the calculation of the Post Tax Rate of Return (PTRR).
No. The judgment relates to the enforcement of an existing arbitral award and the release of bank guarantees, not a new investment or funding.

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