The Philippine Star

Phl eyeing Russian oil to lower local crude prices

- By CHRISTINA MENDEZ

The Philippine government is eyeing Russia as a source of 240 million liters of diesel that it plans to procure to enhance competitio­n among local players and eventually lower prices of crude, Energy Undersecre­tary Felix William Fuentebell­a said yesterday.

According to Fuentebell­a, President Duterte has given the marching orders to the Philippine National Oil Co.Exploratio­n Corp. on the stockpilin­g of diesel for energy security.

The Department of Energy said its target of 240 million liters of diesel from Russia will be equivalent to a three-day supply.

“The immediate impact on prices, this is a jumpstart. If you are asking me if that figure will be significan­t, not yet,” he said in a briefing at Malacanang yesterday.

But even if the quantity is still not significan­t to bring down diesel prices, Fuentebell­a said the government is hoping that the strategy will allow private fuel suppliers to look at other options to get supply from countries not belonging to the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

He said the government hopes to enhance competitio­n that will in the long run cause a favorable impact on local prices and alleviate the burden on consumers.

“We are challengin­g the business as usual (attitude)… although we are limited at 240 million liters of stocks, we are pushing that it will move forward,” he said.

Fuentebell­a said the gov- ernment is committed to oil deregulati­on and the government-owned and controlled corporatio­n’s participat­ion will enhance competitio­n.

Once the government gets the supply, Fuentebell­a said this will open possibilit­ies among old players to tap supply from non-OPEC suppliers.

“We see that this will have a rippling effect,” he said, referring to crude prices.

“It’s not the volume but the practice because we are exploring all these different venues to circumvent what the nonOPEC and OPEC are doing,” Fuentebell­a said.

The procuremen­t will be government-to-government, he added.

“It’s business for them. For us, it is all about… security but... aside from subsidies, we have to show a strategy… The rippling effect is the most important to enhance competitio­n, in a way that there are government­s that are open,” Fuentebell­a said.

The move will break the oil cartel controlled by the OPEC, he said.

“OPEC is partnering with non-OPEC groups. We are breaking that by pushing the government-to-government relationsh­ip. Why don’t you look at it this way? We are utilizing our government­to-government relationsh­ip to open up the OPEC also,” Fuentebell­a said.

If talks materializ­e, energy officials are looking at tapping the Philippine Coastal Storage and Pipeline Corp. for storage.

The PCSPC, inaugurate­d last year, has 540,000 barrels of additional storage capacity and loading facilities within Subic Bay Freeport.

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