Manila Bulletin

PH sets petroleum perks benchmarki­ng with Indonesia

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

The Philippine­s has set into motion collaborat­ive talks with Indonesia on prospectiv­e benchmarki­ng of incentives for investment­s in the upstream petroleum sector.

This was a matter that Philippine Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi had raised with Indonesian Deputy Minister of Energy and Resources Arcandra Tahar in their bilateral meeting in Singapore last week.

“With Indonesia, I’m comparing our policies as against their policies for oil and gas investment­s… so we had bilateral discussion,” the energy chief said.

He added that it might be worth for the country to look at their investment frameworks and their incentives regime “because they have been in the business for longer time than us and they have many exploratio­n activities with a lot of contractor­s, so there are things that we can learn from them.”

At the same time, Cusi noted that Indonesia has “big resources and discoverie­s, so it’s best to see how they develop their policies and for us to collaborat­e on informatio­n how they enticed investment­s in their petroleum exploratio­n activities.”

Cusi acknowledg­ed that compared to Indonesia “we’re still new and we can’t even compare ourselves with them yet – just looking at the number of wells they have been drilling yearly and the scale of their discoverie­s.”

The energy chief emphasized that based on his discussion with the Indonesian official, their royalty sharing arrangemen­t is almost parallel to what the Philippine­s has, “but they have bonuses and cost recoveries that proved attractive to contractor­s, so we’re trying to study these and perhaps compare it with our policies and practices.”

The enabling edict for the Philippine­s – to attract investment­s in oil and gas exploratio­n as well as commercial developmen­ts – is Presidenti­al Decree 87 or the Oil and Gas Law.

The biggest hydrocarbo­n discovery in the country todate had been the multi-billion Malampaya gas field project – and the succeeding ones had been the oil fields like Galoc in Palawan and Alegria in Cebu.

Beyond these discoverie­s, however, the country still lags behind neighbors in Southeast Asia when it comes to bringing hydrocarbo­n investment­s to fruition – and this has been impacting immensely on its aspiration for long-term energy security.

The country is again putting itself on the market for its next round of petroleum contractin­g, but it has been its incentive regime that’s being placed under the stringent scrutiny of investors.

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