Indonesia’s push to nationalize energy assets could chill foreign investment
SINGAPORE/JAKARTA — Indonesia is pushing to nationalize more of its oil and gas assets as it tries to reduce imports and boost government revenue amid emerging market turbulence that has staggered Southeast Asia’s biggest economy.
SINGAPORE/JAKARTA — Indonesia is pushing to nationalize more of its oil and gas assets as it tries to reduce imports and boost government revenue amid emerging market turbulence that has staggered Southeast Asia’s biggest economy.
Since 2015, whenever productsharing contracts with international companies expire, the government has increased stateowned Pertamina’s stakes the related oil and gas fields.
The goal is to accelerate a fouryear-old plan that aims to send domestic crude oil to Indonesian refineries for local use.
But experts say that is risky because it discourages investors and global energy companies who have expertise crucial to maintaining Indonesia’s output.
“Getting rid of the international oil companies’ involvement means Pertamina will be losing valuable technical and operational know-how,” said Den Syahril, a senior oil analyst at consultancy FGE, adding that it could result in “lower productivity at its fields.”
Oil and natural gas are two of Indonesia’s biggest cash earners, but their contribution to government revenue has declined along with output, shrinking from more than 20% a decade ago to under five percent last year, according to government data.
President Joko Widodo, running for re-election in 2019, told supporters this month that he would “safeguard national resources” by nationalizing assets like the large Rokan and Mahakam oil blocks.
In 2021, Pertamina will take over the Rokan block, Indonesia’s secondlargest crude producing field, from current operator Chevron. It already took over Mahakam from France’s Total and Japan’s Inpex this year.
Consultancy PwC says in its 2018 oil and gas investment guide “that crude oil production in Indonesia has been on a downward trend for the past decade” and that its oil industry has entered a “transitional phase, with a growing domestic need for gas for both consumers and industrial use.”
Indonesia’s crude oil output has been declining for decades, from a peak of more than 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) in the 1970s and 1990s, to below 800,000 bpd now, according to industry data.
Government oil and gas revenues have fallen too, from around 400 trillion rupiah ($22.60 billion) in 2010 to 135 trillion in 2017, according to data from SKKMigas.
The situation does not appear likely to improve on its own.
Indonesia is on track to spend far less than planned on its 2018 oil and gas investments. In the first half of the year it spent only $3.9 billion, compared with its target of $14.2 billion, according to regulator SKKMigas.
Just five years ago, the country was investing about $20 billion a year into the industry.
“The country’s failure to attract new foreign investment in the upstream sector has seen licensing activity and development drilling fall to decade low levels,” FGE’s Mr. Syahril said.
Indonesia must act soon if it wants to turn around its declining output, which has already forced the country out of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Without significant spending increases, Rachel Chua of Moody’s Investors Service said Indonesia has only 10 years of oil production left, warning that nationalizing oil and gas fields would crimp foreign investment.
Pertamina has estimated that Rokan would require about $70 billion in investment over the 20year life of its contract. —