The National - News

Disputed claims in the South China Sea slow oil and gas exploratio­n

- ROBIN MILLS

Block 136/3 lies far off the southern Vietnamese coast, under warm and thundery tropical skies.

The drillship Deepsea Metro I, drilling an exploratio­n well in the location for a partnershi­p between state-firm PetroVietn­am, Spain’s Repsol, and Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala, found oil and gas there last month, and intended to keep going deeper. But the drillship had sailed into another storm: China claims this area, and threatened military action if the drilling went on.

On Wednesday, Vietnam decided after a contentiou­s politburo meeting to stop the drilling for now, although the Deepsea Metro I is still at station. Reportedly, the party general secretary and the defence minister felt they could not rely on the United States in case the confrontat­ion escalated.

Further north, close to the mouth of the Gulf of Tonkin, ExxonMobil, formerly headed by the US secretary of state Rex Tillerson, is developing Blue Whale, Vietnam’s largest new gas project. China has not commented specifical­ly on Blue Whale, but it has warned foreign companies from the area, and had threatened BP back in 2007. India’s state ONGC is also exploring off Vietnam, while New Delhi seeks to sell Hanoi advanced weaponry, part of its own policy of trying to build regional allies against Beijing.

Surprising­ly, given its China-like manufactur­ing boom, oil and gas is still only 30 per cent of Vietnam’s GDP. But oil output has been on a plateau since 2000, and dropped by 8 per cent last year. This fast-growing country of 93 million people became a net importer of oil in 2010. With domestic gas output set to decline, Vietnam is also expected to begin importing liquefied natural gas (LNG) by 2023. It is urgent for it to develop more of its offshore resources.

The Philippine­s has a similar dilemma. All its gas comes from the Malampaya gas field, developed by Shell, which will run out within a few years. The Sampaguita field beneath Reed Bank, estimated to hold 20 trillion cubic feet of gas (Malampaya originally held just 2.7 trillion cubic feet), is also disputed by China.

Despite a win at an arbitratio­n over maritime borders, in which China refused to recognise the tribunal, toughtalki­ng Filipino president Rodrigo Duterte instead appears to have conceded his country will not develop Sampaguita on its own.

Of the other countries that claim part of the South China Sea, oil output in the small but wealthy petro-state the Sultanate of Brunei is declining. Malaysia and Indonesia, once major petroleum powers, are both now importers, and have to ship LNG from their other remote islands to their populous industrial­ised heartlands. ExxonMobil last month gave up on trying to develop Indonesia’s vast but technicall­y complex Natuna D Alpha gasfield, also theoretica­lly within China’s claim.

Unlike the Gulf of Tonkin area, which abuts the large Chinese island of Hainan, neither Block 136/3, Natuna nor Sampaguita are anywhere near China, so Beijing cannot develop them itself. Its policy is more one of principle overall its expansive claim to the South China Sea, asserting its dominance over its neighbours, and testing the US’s resolve.

It is not clear whether the US’s lack of support for Vietnam is deliberate, or the result of a government distracted by internal battles and an understaff­ed state department. The former US ambassador to Vietnam David Shear criticised the Trump administra­tion’s “inattentio­n” to the region. Once the Chinese artificial reefs and oil platforms create “facts on the sea”, there will be no going back.

The US’s withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade deal has left the neighbouri­ng countries looking to a Chinese alternativ­e. But some are engaging other allies too: Vietnam is aligning to India, as mentioned, and Indonesia

Co-operative solutions would allow Vietnam, the Philippine­s and China to develop resources

with Australia, a growing LNG supplier to east Asia.

Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala is only a minority partner in the Vietnamese oil venture, but it has other stakes in the country as well as in Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia. The UAE is a neutral party with strong economic relations with all concerned countries. Without interferin­g, some quiet diplomatic conversati­ons may still be useful. Like the Middle East, South East Asia is increasing­ly served by tanker-delivered LNG, but there are very few cross-border gas pipelines. Mubadala itself, of course, developed Dolphin, the Middle East’s most successful internatio­nal pipeline.

If the South East Asian states cannot develop the disputed resources themselves, the next best option is co-operation with China. “Joint developmen­t areas” already exist between Malaysia and Thailand, and Vietnam and Malaysia, and China and Vietnam have agreed to share the Gulf of Tonkin. But a wider accord is problemati­c because China has never formally clarified its expansive South China Sea claim.

Co-operative solutions would allow Vietnam, the Philippine­s and China to go ahead with these promising resources, creating mutual trust and shared interests, without any party having to relinquish sovereignt­y.

Robin Mills is CEO of Qamar Energy, and author of The Myth of the Oil Crisis

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