Sun.Star Cebu

MVP-led firm to drill for oil in disputed area

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MANILA—The chairman of a Philippine energy company said Friday a Chinese state-owned oil producer hasn’t responded to a revived proposal to jointly explore a disputed area of the South China Sea but drilling will go ahead by 2016 with or without a partnershi­p.

Manuel Pangilinan said that Filipino-British company Forum Energy PLC communicat­ed the offer to China National Offshore Oil Corp. to explore Reed Bank, northwest of Palawan. Philippine and Chinese vessels had a confrontat­ion there three years ago.

Pangilinan said the Chinese company, also known as CNOOC, has not responded but Forum is continuing its attempts to engage with the Chinese company. He said the project has not attracted other investors because it is in an area of conflictin­g territoria­l claims and other investors did not want to offend China.

Pangilinan is chairman of Philex Petroleum Corp., majority owner of Lon- don-based Forum Energy that has been awarded the exploratio­n contract.

He had an initial meeting with CNOOC President Yang Hua in 2012, but the talks have stalled, with the territoria­l conflict hampering exploratio­n in the area.

Pangilinan said Forum still intends to drill two wells in first half of 2016.

“We will do it on our own if we have to ... as long as we are not disturbed,” he said.

3 months only

The Department of Energy has extended Forum’s delayed drilling program by a year, giving it up to Aug. 15, 2016 to fulfill its contractua­l obligation­s. Pangilinan said weather would permit drilling only from March to May.

Territoria­l spats between China and the Philippine­s over parts of the South China Sea have worsened in recent years, straining ties.

President Benigno Aquino III on Tuesday voiced concern that two Chinese hydrograph­ic ships sighted by the mili- tary at the disputed Reed Bank in June could presage an attempt to drill for oil there.

In March 2011, Chinese ships tried to drive away a Philippine exploratio­n vessel at the Reed Bank. The Philippine­s deployed two air force planes but the Chinese patrol ships had left by the time the aircraft reached the contested area.

China and the Philippine­s, along with Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam, have been contesting ownership of mostly barren islands, islets, reefs and surroundin­g waters in the South China Sea for years.

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