The Borneo Post

‘Govt, petronas to refine new oil royalty mechanism’

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KUALA LUMPUR: The government will have to discuss the mechanism of the 20 per cent oil royalty payment to petroleum producing states with Petrol i am Nasional Bhd ( Petronas) as a consensus must be reached on the matter, the Dewan Rakyat was told yesterday.

Economic Affairs Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Azmin Ali said the rationale behind this effort was fulfilling the principle of distributi­ve justice and fairness in the distributi­on of wealth.

He said from Pakatan Harapan (PH) understand­ing, the proposal to increase the petroleum royalty to 20 per cent was based on Petronas’s profits after taxation and not from total gross production.

“PH has made the cost structure analysis of petroleum production by Petronas,” he said when responding to a question from Datuk Seri Panglima Madius Tangau ( UPKO-Tuaran) during the question-and-answer session.

Azmin said however, the proposal could not be implemente­d immediatel­y as it ran contrary to the Petroleum Developmen­t Act (PDA) 1974 as the calculatio­n was based on gross profit rather than net profit.

If the 20 per cent petroleum royalty is to be handed out, it would require an amendment on the PDA 1974 as the existing Act only allow the payment of 10 per cent royalty of oil and gas royalty from gross production in cash to the federal government and oil producer states, he said.

At this moment, five percent of this amount will be received by the federal government and the petroleum-producing states, he said, adding that Petronas would normally make the payment twice a year, namely in February and August.

He said if Petronas were required to add the petroleum royalty to 20 per cent of the total gross output of petroleum to oil producing states, it would have serious implicatio­ns on the financial position of Petronas and the federal government.

Currently the 10 per cent cash payment is a gross value per barrel at the market price and is made without considerin­g whether oil and gas production from the fields is profitable or not, Azmin said.

He said based on the current situation, out of per barrel value, 70 per cent of gross output of oil and gas was the cost of production recovery that needed to be financed.

The cost has significan­tly increased over the years due to complexity and increased risks in offshore oil and gas exploratio­n, he said. — Bernama

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