BusinessMirror

D.O.E. READY FOR OIL FIRMS’ LAWSUITS OVER UNBUNDLING CIRCULAR

- By Lenie Lectura @llectura

THE Department of Energy (DOE) is ready to face lawsuits from oil firms opposed to the impending issuance of an overdue circular that will require them to unbundle fuel cost.

“We have no choice but to face it,” said DOE Undersecre­tary Felix William Fuentebell­a via text message on Wednesday.

The release of the circular should have happened in June last year, at just about the time the public was reeling from a surge in inflation where rising fuel prices—on account of global market movements and the higher excise tax—were cited as a key factor.

The move to compel oil companies to unbundle their fuel cost was seen as boosting transparen­cy in pricing. However, the circular was not released in June as agency had to conduct another round of focus group discussion­s with the stakeholde­rs.

The DOE is ready to issue the circular anytime soon, Fuentebell­a said.“The third and last public consultati­on was held at the end of January. We are now in the process of finalizing the circular and getting the position papers.”

The draft policy enables the unbundling of the base prices of petroleum products, namely, gasoline, automotive and industrial diesel, kerosene, jet fuel, bunker fuel oil and household and automotive liquefied petroleum gas. This is the first time that the government, through the DOE, will require oil companies to make public the breakdown of the costs that go into the pricing of fuel.

The DOE also wants oil companies to provide a weekly notice of the price adjustment­s—whether decrease, increase or no adjustment—alongside the computatio­n of their products’components based on the elements involved in the internatio­nal price movement, the biofuels cost and the operationa­l cost recovery.

The Independen­t Philippine Petroleum Companies Associatio­n and the Philippine Institute of Petroleum (PIP) have a similar stand on the issue, according to Ippca President Bong Suntay.

The oil industry is a deregulate­d industry, he said. Most of the key components of oil price are already public knowledge, such as price of crude oil which is published by MOPS (Mean of Platts Singapore), carriage price or vessel, insurance and dollar exchange rate are also easily determinab­le.

MOPS refers to the price of finished products, such as gasoline and diesel that are sold in pumping stations nationwide.

“But there are some things “There are some things which are proprietar­y to each oil company which they cannot divulge, the same being trade secrets. Divulging such would mean losing their advantage.”—Suntay

which are proprietar­y to each oil company which they cannot divulge, the same being trade secrets. Divulging such would mean losing their advantage,” said Suntay.

Ippca has at least 16 members comprising the country’s leading independen­t oil players, such as Eastern Petroleum Corp., Unioil Petroleum Philippine­s Inc., Seaoil Philippine­s, Flying V, City Oil, Pryce Gases and LPGMA, among others.

When asked if his group was considerin­g going to court to stop the implementa­tion of the circular, Suntay said in an interview on Wednesday, “It’s an option that we will have to get a consensus from the other oil companies.”

PIP Executive Director Teddy Reyes said in an e-mail reply that the group strongly objects to the unbundling proposal, “but to date resorting to legal action is not considered yet.”

The group, composed of Petron Corp., Pilipinas Shell, Chevron, PTT Philippine­s and Isla LPG, cited several reasons for resisting unbundling.

He said almost 90 percent of pump price cost components are published and therefore transparen­t. “As such, informatio­n sought by the draft circular may be derived by the DOE without necessaril­y requiring players’ disclosure of commercial­ly sensitive informatio­n.

“Too much transparen­cy will discourage investing in the country,” said Reyes, adding that local and foreign investors would want a level playing field under a deregulate­d setup fostering a market-driven competitio­n.

PIP added that mandating extreme transparen­cy in pricing “is a bane in business, pricing strategies needed to survive financiall­y and operationa­lly lose flexibilit­y. “

While weekly price adjustment­s are almost similar to all, the eventual and final prices in the pump are market forces-based, stressed Reyes.

“Competitio­n is very tight so competitio­n occurs in the pump of retail stations located in common trading areas. The increments vary from one trading area to another in various locations in a town, province, region,” he added.

Moreover, Reyes said individual company decisions, particular­ly on how to strategize pricing is crucial to sustaining operationa­l and financial viability.

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