The Philippine Star

DOE eyes up to 3 oil, gas drillings

- By DANESSA RIVERA

Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi hopes to start exploratio­n works in at least two to three oil and gas prospects under the current administra­tion, taking into account the country’s need to develop indigenous resources amid rising fuel prices.

The Philippine­s has trailed behind in terms of oil and gas developmen­t as exploratio­n and drilling works in the oil and gas sector dramatical­ly declined in the past two decades.

“During the last administra­tion, we were only averaging three a year and during the time of [president] Gloria

Arroyo, it was eight a year. In this administra­tion, however, we are experienci­ng difficulty but we’re rushing it,” Cusi said.

“Our neighbors are doing much more than us. I think Myanmar is doing 29 a year, if I am not mistaken. Vietnam is around 40 a year, while Indonesia is doing somewhere around that number,” he said.

That’s why the Department of Energy (DOE) is busy promoting investment­s in the 14 pre-determined areas (PDAs) for potential petroleum exploratio­n and developmen­t activities locally and abroad.

The PDAs include one area in the Cagayan Basin, three in Eastern Palawan, three in Sulu, two in Agusan-Davao, one in Cotabato, and four in Western Luzon, which were previously under the fifth round of the Philippine Energy Contractin­g Round (PECR).

These PDAs will be offered under the Philippine Convention­al Energy Contractin­g Program (PCECP), which will be launched in November.

“We are pushing it because the only way for us to find oil is to explore and we know the difficulty of exploring, so the more we explore the more that our chances will be higher,” Cusi said.

Under the PCECP, the DOE hopes that at least two or three of these PDAs will start developmen­t within the Duterte administra­tion.

“We have a good chance to find two or three so this is why we’re pushing for an exploratio­n program and conducting roadshows because we want to find oil,” Cusi said.

The energy chief also cited some challenges in attracting investors in the country’s oil and gas sector.

“The issues haunting us are the taxes, the sharing of the taxes and our reputation of changing the rules of the game. These are creating uncertaint­ies,” Cusi said.

He was referring to the 2009 report of the Commission on Audit (COA) on the Department of Energy (DoE) which said the Malampaya consortium owed the government around P53.14 billion in taxes.

Meanwhile, the DOE is continuous­ly pushing for the lifting of the moratorium on all exploratio­n and drilling works in the disputed waters but this is still dependent on the diplomatic discussion­s between the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) and its counterpar­t in China.

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