The Phnom Penh Post

Kingdom set for multi-million dollar oil payday in Oct

- May Kunmakara

CAMBODIA expects to receive millions of dollars next month in proceeds from the sale of nearly 300,000 barrels of crude oil stolen by the Bahamasfla­gged tanker MT Strovolos last year following a payment dispute with the Apsara oil field’s Singaporea­n developer, KrisEnergy, according to a senior energy official.

This, after long-running discussion­s came to a close on September 10, with the concerned parties reaching a settlement, Ministry of Mines and Energy Cheap Sour told The Post on September 29.

Speaking at a September 28 event at Kep Provincial Hall, energy minister Suy Sem recapped that, in June last year, the MT Strovolos – while on lease by KrisEnergy for oil storage – left Cambodian waters with the roughly 47 million litres of oil without obtaining customs clearance or the required permission from the authoritie­s, before traversing across the territoria­l waters of many Asian countries.

Indonesian authoritie­s seized the tanker and its crew over a month later, and confirmed that 297,686.518 barrels of oil were onboard.

The minister confirmed that his ministry was able secure a 70 per cent portion of the sales’ proceeds for Cambodia after complicate­d negotiatio­ns and legal proceeding­s. Sem put the dollar amount of the Kingdom’s share in the broad $1020 million range, saying that this sum would “contribute to the state budget”.

Meanwhile, Sour confirmed that the oil had been sold, and transferre­d from the MT Strovolos to an undisclose­d buyer on September 10. “Payment will be made 30 days after the purchase, so we expect to receive the money around October 11,” he said.

Speaking at an August 8 press conference, ministry secretary of state Meng Saktheara had said Cambodia’s 70 per cent share was expected to amount to “more than $25 million”.

However, given the volume confirmed by the Indonesian authoritie­s, the crude would need to be sold at an average of no less than $119.98 per barrel to reach Saktheara’s prediction, far higher than the currently downtrendi­ng prices of global crude oil benchmarks.

For reference, KrisEnergy Group in 2014 bought a controllin­g stake in the offshore Block A concession from US oil giant Chevron for $65 million, and in 2017 entered into a petroleum agreement for exploratio­n and developmen­t from the government.

However, just 157 days after it extracted Cambodia’s first drops of crude from the Apsara oil field, KrisEnergy Ltd filed for liquidatio­n on June 4, 2021, confirming that it was unable to pay its debts. The Apsara area is located in the northeaste­rn part of offshore Block A in the Khmer Basin of the Gulf of Thailand.

KrisEnergy pumped a total of nearly 300,000 barrels from Cambodian waters, leaving almost 200,000 barrels’ worth in the five wells drilled by the company.

However, a team at the energy ministry and Canadianow­ned company EnerCam Resources Co Ltd (EnerCam) are looking into picking up where KrisEnergy left off and studying the possibilit­y of investing in oil extraction from Block A, using equipment seized by the ministry.

 ?? KRISENERGY ?? KrisEnergy filed for liquidatio­n on Friday, saying it is unable to pay its debts.
KRISENERGY KrisEnergy filed for liquidatio­n on Friday, saying it is unable to pay its debts.

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