The Philippine Star

Phl, China to explore for oil in Palawan

- By DANESSA RIVERA

Exploratio­n in an oil and gas prospect offshore northwest Palawan between the Philippine­s and China is now awaiting the signature of President Duterte, Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said yesterday.

Service contract (SC) 57 in offshore Calamian northwest of Palawan is a joint venture among state-run PNOC Exploratio­n Corp. (PNOCEC), Mitra Energy Ltd. (MEL) – now Jadestone Energy Inc. – and China National Offshore Oil Co. (CNOOC), China’s state-owned oil producer.

The Department of Energy (DOE) has endorsed SC 57 to President Duterte for signing to start pursuing exploratio­n in the area, Cusi said after the opening ceremony of the 35th ASEAN Ministers on Energy Meeting (AMEM) yesterday.

“We have already finished the documentat­ion, the contract and we presented it already to the Office of the President. SC 57 is within the Philippine territory,” he said.

Cusi said the project has been pending since 2008 because of tax inclusion and other issues.

SC 57 has been awarded to

PNOC-EC by the DOE on Sept. 15, 2005 to conduct petroleum exploratio­n and developmen­t over a 720,000-hectare area in the Calamian area.

The exploratio­n area lies north of the country’s oil fields such as the Malampaya, Nido, Cadlao and Matinloc, and is located within the northwest Palawan block where most of the country’s oil production comes from.

In 2006, PNOC-EC entered into a farmin agreement with CNOOC and Jadestone. CNOOC holds the biggest share at 51 percent, Jadestone with 21 percent and PNOCEC with the remaining 28 percent.

This was already submitted for approval to Malacañang but was hampered due to the issuance of Executive Order (EO) 556 later that year. This has also virtually halted efforts to reinvigora­te the country’s upstream oil industry.

Sec. 1 of the EO states that there shall be no “farm in” or “farm out” contracts awarded by any government agency, including the Philippine National Oil Co. (PNOC), including the contract for the exploratio­n, developmen­t and production of crude oil from the CamagoMala­mpaya reservoir.

At the same time, Sec. 7 states “any and all negotiatio­ns or arrangemen­ts entered into by any government agency, including the PNOC which violate this Executive Order, shall be immediatel­y discontinu­ed or cancelled.”

With the EO, the Petroleum Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (PAP) said there is no stability of contracts with the government and agreements can be canceled just by the issuance of EOs.

More recently, PNOC-EC president and CEO Pedro Aquino Jr. said the EO has been a “major stumbling block” of the stateowned firm in the upstream industry.

Other concerns in the upstream industry is the Commission on Audit (COA) ruling in 2015, which upheld its 2009 findings that P53.14 billion in taxes were uncollecte­d from the Malampaya project operated by Shell Philippine­s Exploratio­n B.V., Chevron Malampaya LLC and the PNOC-EC.

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