The Borneo Post

Myanmar plans first oil and gas bids since 2014

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New bids for oil and gas exploratio­n and developmen­t rights on a series of blocks, along with reforms to joint-venture requiremen­ts, are expected to stoke renewed interest in Myanmar’s energy sector and boost investment inflows.

On August 30 the Ministry of Electricit­y and Energy (MoEE) announced it would be opening fresh rounds of bidding for oil and gas blocks in the first half of next year, and there are plans to launch a tender for at least one onshore block before the end of 2018.

If all goes according to plan, the MoEE’s Department of Oil and Gas Planning will offer 18 onshore and 13 offshore blocks.

The bids are aimed at revitalisi­ng Myanmar’s energy sector, which has seen activity slow down in recent years. The last round of exploratio­n and production (E&P) tenders were held under the former government in 2014.

However, of the 31 blocks the MoEE intends to offer, 16 have been awarded in previous tender rounds, and the winning bidders subsequent­ly relinquish­ed their exploratio­n rights. Preliminar­y testing was conducted on some of the blocks that were handed back by former leaseholde­rs, which may raise doubts over their commercial viability.

A lack of E&P opportunit­ies in recent years, along with the departure of a number of internatio­nal energy companies from the local market, has been a major contributo­r to declining foreign direct investment (FDI).

In FY 2017/18 the total value of FDI fell from US$6.65 billion to US$ 5.72 billion, according to the Myanmar Investment Commission. New discovery could fuel investment appetite in offshore fields

Nonetheles­s, recent finds in the upstream energy segment have brought new opportunit­ies in the country’s offshore fields to the fore.

On September 22 Francehead­quartered multinatio­nal energy company Total reported encouragin­g results from preliminar­y testing at the offshore Shwe Yee Htun-2 field, located approximat­ely 100 km northeast of Pathein township. Initial appraisal of the find indicates significan­t natural gas reserves of commercial viability.

Further testing on the block will be carried out to determine the extent of the deposit, since gas was found in each of the five appraisal wells, officials said.

The Shwe Yee Htun-2 field is part of the larger A6 block that has estimated reserves of up to 3trn cu feet, according to a statement by Total.

Myanmar has 53 onshore and 51 offshore blocks that have been identified as having commercial­ly extractabl­e reserves, and activity is currently under way at 35 onshore and 38 offshore blocks. Production-sharing contracts revised to attract internatio­nal investors

Beyond offering new prospects in oil and gas, the government is also looking to lift the requiremen­t that overseas investors partner with a local company.

“It will no longer be mandatory to join up with local firms,” Daw Khin Htay, director at the state- owned Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise, said at a press conference in mid-July. “This will instead be made voluntary in the future.”

In the past, the authoritie­s required that oil and gas projects be joint ventures. This was in part to ensure skills and technology transfer to the domestic energy sector, in order to better equip it for future growth. However, the requiremen­t also diluted foreign investors’ holdings and revenue.

Potential leaseholde­rs may also be encouraged by reports that the Department of Oil and Gas Planning is reviewing the terms of production-sharing contracts.

According to consultanc­y Wood Mackenzie, some contracts mandate that the state receive up to 94 per cent of all revenue generated from hydrocarbo­ns projects, which is at the upper end of the internatio­nal scale. Additional­ly, the government does not currently share the risk in exploratio­n and developmen­t costs. To this end, stakeholde­rs have called for the government to reduce its share of revenue from oil and gas projects.

Although this would lower state receipts from each project, the increased flexibilit­y of energy contracts could help to increase the investment appeal of the new blocks and future offerings. However, this restructur­ing has yet to actually take place.

This Myanmar economic update was produced by Oxford business Group.

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