Manila Bulletin

PNOC wants ‘voice’ in Malampaya project

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State-run Philippine National Oil Company (PNOC) has formally asked the Department of Energy (DOE) for its inclusion in the negotiatin­g panel that will flesh out the terms of any portended license extension for the multi-billion Malampaya gas field project.

“That will be next year, we will have to sit in the negotiatin­g table... and I requested the Secretary that PNOC should be included,” PNOC president and chief executive officer Reuben S. Lista said.

He explained that the state-run firm must lend its voice to the targeted discussion­s, not just because of its banked gas, but primarily on prospects that it might eventually administer the Operation and Maintenanc­e (O&M) deal – in case the decision is to place the gas field under the State’s charge.

“There’s a possibilit­y that PNOCEC or PNOC mother might be asked to look for a sub-contractor O&M (for the gas field),” he said.

PNOC-Exploratio­n Corporatio­n is a subsidiary of PNOC, which is a minority stakeholde­r in the Service Contract 38 of Shell Philippine­s Exploratio­n B.V., or the corporate vehicle of the Malampaya consortium in the commercial developmen­t and operation of the gas field.

Given its stake in SC 38, PNOC-EC may not likely be the perfect government entity that will sit in the negotiatin­g table when Malampaya’s license extension parameters will be discussed, according to Lista.

“I asked the Secretary that the president of PNOC mother be a part of the negotiatin­g team…it should be us because PNOCEC can’t represent PNOC in the negotiatio­ns because it is a partner of SC 38,” the PNOC chief executive reiterated.

The Malampaya service contract will lapse in 2024 and there had been previous applicatio­n of the operating consortium to have its license extended for 15 years – or until 2039.

Lista neverthele­ss qualified that the outcome of the negotiatio­ns could either be: the government warrants an extension or the State will take over the facility. The second one propels the need to engage technicall­y and financiall­y qualified O&M contractor­s.

He opined that even if the decision will be for government to eventually operate the field, first priority may still be given to Shell and Chevron when it comes to the O&M deal. (MMV)

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