Manila Bulletin

Cusi hopeful Xi visit to clinch oil search deal

- ALFONSO CUSI

Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi is optimistic that a deal to jointly explore disputed areas of the South China Sea for oil and gas will finally move forward when President Xi Jinping visits next month.

Terms for an agreement between the Philippine­s and China may be finalized during Xi’s visit, Cusi said in an interview in Singapore. The government is also discussing lifting a ban on exploratio­n in contested waters imposed by President Rodrigo Duterte’s predecesso­r, which thwarted a potential venture between PXP Energy Corp. and China National Offshore Oil Corp.

“We are discussing lifting the moratorium, and it is proposed that we do joint exploratio­n with China,” Cusi said on Tuesday. “Those two are still being discussed and hopefully that will be resolved during the visit of President Xi Jinping. I would not wish to pre-empt things, but we are hopeful that we will come up with the terms of operations.”

Any deal on joint exploratio­n would mark a major win for China, which has stepped up efforts over the past decade to block Southeast Asian nations from extracting energy resources in disputed seas. The Philippine­s had previously aligned with Vietnam in rejecting China’s claims to most of the South China Sea as a basis for joint exploratio­n.

President Benigno Aquino, who left office in 2016, had halted exploratio­n work at Reed Bank in the South China Sea after filing an arbitratio­n case disputing Beijing’s claims to the resource-rich waters. An internatio­nal court based in the Netherland­s ruled in favor of Manila in July 2016, barely a month after Duterte took office. Since his election win, the 73-year-old Philippine leader has pivoted to China. He set aside the ruling and backed the idea of joint exploratio­n, proposing a 60-40 sharing on the proceeds. The US Energy Informatio­n Administra­ted has estimated that 4 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves worth billions of dollars could be found in areas claimed by the Philippine­s.

Even as Duterte and Xi’s friendship has deepened, talks on a deal have dragged on for months. A meeting between top diplomats from the two countries on Monday failed to produce a breakthrou­gh on the joint exploratio­n plan.

PXP Energy Chairman Manuel Pangilinan struck a bearish tone on Monday, telling reporters he didn’t think the ban on disputed sea exploratio­n would be lifted in time for Xi’s visit in the third week of November. Talks with CNOOC can’t be restarted until the Philippine­s and China clinch a bilateral agreement, he said. (Bloomberg)

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