The Freeman

Phl, Israeli firm sign deal

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The Philippine government signed yesterday an "initial" seven-year oil exploratio­n deal with an Israeli firm in a bid to develop the country's own energy sources amid sharp swings in oil prices in the internatio­nal market.

At a ceremony in the Malacañang, President Rodrigo Duterte and his energy minister, Alfonso Cusi, inked a petroleum service contract with Itay Raphael Tabibzada, president and CEO of Israelbase­d Ratio Petroleum Ltd.

Ratio Petroleum can now explore Area 4, which covers 416,000 hectares across the East Palawan Basin, for potential oil and gas resources. Projected total expenditur­e is valued at a minimum of $34,350,000.

“The President has been very clear — our country needs to attain energy security and sustainabi­lity at the soonest possible time. We are currently experienci­ng how our dependence on importatio­n has left us at the mercy of price movements in the global oil markets,” Cusi was quoted as saying in a news release.

“We need to boost the exploratio­n and developmen­t of our own energy resources and the awarding of the petroleum service contract to Ratio Petroleum is a step in the right direction,” he added.

Inflation jumped to an over nine-year high of 6.7 percent in September, amid food supply bottleneck­s, a weak peso and a surge in global oil prices, translatin­g to higher pump prices in the Philippine­s, a net importer of oil.

Some analysts see oil prices to spike above $100 per barrel towards the end of 2018 or by early 2019, as US President Donald Trump's sanctions against Iran, a major crude exporter, take effect in November.

Philippine policymake­rs, meanwhile, expects price of Dubai crude — used as a benchmark for Asia — to average $70-75 per barrel this year and $75-85 next. This range is forecast to drop to $70-80 a barrel in 2020, before declining to as low as $6575 for 2021 and 2022.

Year-to-date, domestic gasoline price jumped P10.55/liter, while prices of diesel and kerosene increased P11.50/liter and P10.50/liter, respective­ly.

The petroleum service contract with Ratio Petroleum, which has large operations at the Levant Basin in the Eastern Mediterran­ean Sea, was the first under Duterte, who visited Israel last month.

The Duterte government is also working on a framework on possible joint oil exploratio­n with China in the resourceri­ch West Philippine Sea, the portion of the hotly disputed South China Sea that the Philippine­s claims. However, this plan has been met with protests from administra­tion critics.

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