By: Daxim L. Lucas - 05:19 AM
September 25, 2017
Petron Corp. has asked the state-run
Philippine National Oil Corp. (PNOC) to honor the terms of a long-standing
property lease— a deal drawn up by the government itself—amid a move by the
agency’s new head to raise the rent to be paid by the country’s largest
petroleum firm.
The call for PNOC to stick to the
terms of its own lease agreement was made by Petron president Ramon Ang amid
statements from PNOC president Ruben Lista that the government firm, under
whose name many of Petron’s properties are lodged, wanted to “renegotiate” the
contract ahead of its expiration in August 2018.
Ang—who also heads the country’s
largest conglomerate San Miguel Corp.—pointed out that Petron’s lease with PNOC
provided for an “automatic renewal” of the contract with the state firm over an
aggregate land area of 200 hectares covering separate properties on which the
petroleum giant built its Bataan oil refinery, oil depots and various gasoline
stations.
“If they don’t want to honor that [contract],
they can make the move to settle [the dispute] by arbitration,” Ang said,
referring to the provisions of the deal. “We don’t need to do anything. [The
agreement is] covered by an automatic renewal [provision].”
The property deal between Petron and
PNOC stemmed from the former’s privatization in the 1990s when its real estate
assets were transferred to its then-parent firm PNOC for a nominal fee of P2
million. The agreement allowed half of Petron’s shares to be sold to petroleum
giant Saudi Aramco, which, as a foreign entity, was prohibited by law from
owning real estate in the country.
In exchange for its P2 million
investment, PNOC would earn fees from the long-term lease on the properties
lodged under its name. The automatic lease renewal provision was included in
the deal by the government itself as an assurance to Saudi Aramco and future
foreign and local investors ahead of the firm’s 1994 initial public offering
that Petron’s operations would be unhampered by the government’s privatization
move.
Nonetheless, Ang said Petron was
“open and willing” to sit down with PNOC to discuss the issue as well as any
proposals that would emerge to settle the issue.
Any changes that PNOC wants to
propose on the terms of the lease agreement “should be put in writing” and
backed up officially by a resolution from its board of directors, he said.
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