The Borneo Post

Cradle of Sarawak’s oil, and Canadian drillers

- Terry Justin Dit > Terry is a lecturer in the Department of Media and Communicat­ions, Faculty of Humanities and Health Sciences at Curtin Malaysia. He currently teaches Borneo Studies and Media at the university. He can be contacted via terry.j@curtin.ed

MIRI is the second-largest city in Sarawak and has been recognised as home of the Malaysian oil and gas (O&G) industry for well over a century.

Oil was first struck on

Oct 10, 1910 and Canada Hill, where the first well was located overlookin­g the small settlement at the time, was reportedly named in honour of a certain Mr McAlpine, a Canadian employee of the Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Company who was the field manager in charge of the drilling.

It is also speculated that the hill’s name was attributed to the team of Canadian drillers working in the local oil industry in the early days of Miri. Either way, the name stuck and that is how this prominent limestone ridge and famous Miri landmark obtained its name.

Petrolia and Oil Springs are towns in southweste­rn Ontario, Canada. Both are part of Lambton County and surrounded by Enniskille­n Township. Petrolia is popularly billed as ‘Canada’s Victorian Oil Town’ and is often accredited with starting the oil industry in North America, a claim shared with the nearby town of Oil Springs.

It was also from the towns of Petrolia and Oil Springs that the Canadians who explored for oil in Miri are believed to have originated from. Due to them, Sarawak and Miri were put on the world map of oil exploratio­n, and Miri was soon dubbed the ‘Oil Town’ of Sarawak.

In fact, men from Enniskille­n provided skilled labour and technical expertise that were necessary for the developmen­t of the global petroleum industry. In the late 19th and early 20th century in virtually all parts of the world where petroleum was discovered, whether it was in Java, Borneo, Sumatra, or Persia, Enniskille­n drillers often provided the skilled labour and expertise.

With their knowledge of drilling, extracting, storing and transporti­ng oil, these Canadian experts reached 86 countries before World War II. The very first batch Enniskille­n’s so-called ‘foreign drillers’ to venture into what was then the Dutch East, departed in December 1873, but it is uncertain when the first Canadian drillers arrived in large numbers in Miri – probably it could not have been long after the first discovery of oil in 1910.

The men would usually sign contracts of one-, three-, and five-year terms. Travelling to faraway lands to earn a living was never easy but these ‘foreign drillers’ persevered and made a name for themselves as hard working, reliable profession­als.

Petrolia remained the top oil-producing centre in Canada and amongst the top producing regions in the world until 1894, when dwindling reserves brought its boom period to an end.

As oil was found in other places around North America, many of the experience­d oil hands and entreprene­urs from Ontario left for new opportunit­ies.

Just as Canada had, at one time, produced skilled oil drillers and workers for the world’s oil industry, so too had Sarawak.

At one point in time, Miri supplied manpower and expertise to different oil fields all over the globe. The closest possible equivalent to Petrolia and Oil Springs in Miri would have to be, in my humble opinion, Kampung Sealine, so called because of the ‘Sea Loading Lines’, which pumped oil from land to tankers moored offshore used to run through the village.

In the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s, a sizeable proportion of Mirians who were in the oil industry, working on oil platforms, barges and fields all over the world, probably came from Kampung Sealine.

The majority of the villagers were people from the interior of Miri Division and from other parts of Sarawak, who were trying to create a better future for themselves and their families.

Working the oil fields was lucrative and a rite of passage for many local men, just as it were for the men from Petrolia and Oil Springs.

But whatever prosperity the oil and gas industry had brought to Miri, all that came to an abrupt stop around 2014 to 2016 when a huge oversupply of oil flooded the world market.

Between mid-2014 and early 2016, the global economy faced one of the largest oil price declines in modern history. The 70-per cent price drop during that period was one of the three biggest declines since World War II, and the longest lasting since the supply-driven collapse of 1986.

Large numbers of layoffs occurred, which affected O&G workers and their families. Whereas Petrolia and Oil Springs declined as ‘oil towns’ due to the end of the oil boom, the sad irony was that for Miri, the decline was due to a global glut in oil supply.

So what now for Miri?

Oil prices will undoubtedl­y go up again, but for most people who at one time were reliant on the O&G industry as a means of making a lucrative living, the future remains uncertain.

When the oil boom died down for Petrolia and Oil Springs, the oil men had to look elsewhere for employment.

Kampung Sealine, where almost every family had family members working in the O&G industry, is now just a shadow of its former self.

Most of the families who lived there in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s have moved elsewhere, to nearby Senadin and Permyjaya and other housing estates within Miri.

Miri has lost the opportunit­y to commercial­ise its oil exploratio­n heritage and promote it as part of local and internatio­nal tourism, unlike Petrolia.

Beginning in the 1970s, a new economic and commercial base for the town was built around the commercial­isation of heritage to promote tourism.

Petrolia is now marketed as ‘Canada’s Victorian Oil Town’. The economic revitalisa­tion of Petrolia around tourism emphasises the town’s past as a 19th-century oil-boom town. The foreign drillers have been used to highlight the importance of Petrolia to the developmen­t of the global oil industry.

Miri had the Lutong Refinery, an installati­on which was of industrial historical importance, but that has since been dismantled.

The ‘foreign drillers’ of Petrolia and Oil Springs and the O&G workers of Miri, although separated by time and distance, have a lot in common. All of them had the spirit of pioneering, hard work and the tenacity to carry on no matter how difficult things could be.

During periods when the oil markets declined, local drillers were left unemployed and this has been a common occurrence throughout the history of the industry.

The importance of heritage preservati­on gives Petrolia an advantage, for the regional authoritie­s there have leveraged its oil exploratio­n past to rejuvenate the local economy, something which has not been done for Miri.

Similar to various forms of tangible and intangible cultural heritage, the preservati­on of industrial heritage is essential as it serves as an important testament to the developmen­tal milestones in the history of a nation.

While we may regret the neglect of tangible industrial monuments in Miri, there is still a glimmer of hope in preserving aspects of its intangible heritage, which comes in the form of stories, photograph­s, and oral histories of its diverse citizens.

The act of gathering, conserving, and disseminat­ing stories, photograph­s, and oral histories not only passes down knowledge from one generation to another, but also deepens our comprehens­ion of the past by shedding light on personal experience­s.

The true narrative of history is discovered within the lives of ordinary individual­s who lived through it.

It is in this area where probably institutio­ns like Miri City Council, Pustaka Negeri Sarawak and educationa­l institutio­ns like Curtin University Malaysia can play a valuable role.

We can only hope for the best for Miri, a small city that has contribute­d much to Sarawak and Malaysia.

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 ?? ?? Photo shows the ‘Grand Old Lady’ on Canada Hill – the site of the country’s first oil well. It is also speculated that the hill’s name was attributed to the team of Canadian drillers working in the local oil industry in the early days of Miri.
Photo shows the ‘Grand Old Lady’ on Canada Hill – the site of the country’s first oil well. It is also speculated that the hill’s name was attributed to the team of Canadian drillers working in the local oil industry in the early days of Miri.

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