Danessa Rivera (The Philippine Star)
- July 27, 2018 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines — Upstream oil
and gas firm PXP Energy Corp. is hoping the government will soon lift the
moratorium to allow it to start exploring its service contracts amid widening
losses.
“The company is mindful that the
Malampaya gas resource, which supplies about 40 percent of Luzon’s power requirements,
could be exhausted within the next decade. In that light, resumption of
exploration in SC 72 is in the national interest,” PXP Energy said.
PXP Energy holds a 78.98-percent
interest operating interest in Service Contract (SC) 72 or the contract to
explore Recto Bank in the West Philippine Sea through London-listed Forum
Energy Plc.
It also has a direct operating
interest of 50 percent in SC 75 northwest Palawan.
“The company remains hopeful that
the force majeure imposed on SC 72 and SC 75 will be lifted by the Department
of Energy soon for the company to be able to resume exploration works in these
SCs,” PXP Energy said.
In the first half, the company
reported wider losses on higher costs and decommissioning of two wells.
Consolidated net loss attributable
to equity holders was P20.1 million versus P11.3 million last year.
PXP Energy recorded a 27 percent
jump in consolidated petroleum revenues from to P66.7 million as a result of
the 33 percent improvement in crude oil price offset by lower crude
production.
The company’s consolidated cost and
expenses jumped 42 percent to P110.5 million “brought about by higher depletion
cost in Galoc and the decommissioning of Tara and Libro wells in Service
Contract 14, offset by continuous containment of group overhead.”
At the start of the year, PXP Energy
and its partners have gotten a new investor in the Peru oil prospect called
Block Z-38 with the entry Tullow Oil, a UK-listed oil explorer.
Karoon Gas Australia Ltd. said the
consortium owning offshore exploration Block Z-38 in Tumbes Basin Peru signed a
farm-out of a 35 percent interest with Tullow Peru Limited, a wholly owned
subsidiary of Tullow Oil.
Under the deal, Tullow will fund
43.75 percent of the cost of the first exploration well amounting to $27.5
million at 100 percent, beyond which Tullow will pay its 35 percent share. It
will also pay $2 million upon completion with a further $7 million payable upon
declaration of commercial discovery and submission of a development plan to
Perupetro.
Once the farm-out well is completed,
Tullow will have an option to assume operatorship of the block.
Block Z-38 sits in the heart of the
Tumbes Basin, adjacent to the prolific oil producing Talara Basin which has
produced 1.7 billion barrel of oil equivalent since 1880.
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