Published
By Myrna M. Velasco
PXP Energy Corporation
is firming up to US$6.0 billion worth of investments from the time it is
finally allowed to resume exploration activities at the Recto Bank and that is
up to the extent when the portended gas discovery merits commercial
development.
At the estimated scale
that could match the size of the Malampaya field, PXP Energy Chairman Manuel V.
Pangilinan said the magnitude of investment will be huge and the company itself
would not be able to pursue that without deep-pocketed as well as technically
equipped partner.
“We’re estimating
anywhere between US$4-billion to US$6-billion investment requirements to
develop the gas field,” he stressed. By far, that is anchored on assumptions
that there will eventually be commercial gas deposits that can be extracted
from the block.
Pangilinan is of course
cognizant of present realities that PXP Energy may not still be able to carry
out extended seismic survey or drillings at the Recto Bank, because Service
Contract 72 had been among those covered by the oil and gas exploration
moratorium because of the lingering diplomatic tussle with China.
He thus noted that he
agrees with President Rodrigo Duterte’s stance that the two governments must
first agree on a mutually acceptable joint exploration framework before
resumption of drilling activities at the so-called conflict areas.
In the end, he stated that the ‘joint deal’ with China may be beneficial even
to the local players who have been sorting out partnership with Chinese companies
in their oil and gas exploration ventures.
PXP Energy, for one,
had been in talks with China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) for the
Recto Bank upstream oil and gas venture – but both parties can only move
forward with the imprimatur of both governments and upon lifting of the
moratorium by the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) for the diplomatically
strained petroleum blocks.
“If we’re just speaking
from the perspective of PXP Energy, we don’t have the expertise – we’re up to point
only on survey and the initial drilling. Beyond that, we don’t have the
expertise nor the funding for a size similar to gas at Malampaya,” Pangilinan
stressed.
He added that “it’s
difficult, PXP is too small, so we have to have partners to do the work and
CNOOC is one of them.”
Pangilinan further
opined that given the circumstances of the local upstream petroleum players and
the foreign affairs-related issues at the West
Philippine Sea, the best way out would still be an agreement between the Philippines and Chinese governments. “We always believe that given the political dynamics of the situation there, some arrangements have to be reached with China. He (Duterte) is right that there got to be some arrangement with China,” he stressed.
Philippine Sea, the best way out would still be an agreement between the Philippines and Chinese governments. “We always believe that given the political dynamics of the situation there, some arrangements have to be reached with China. He (Duterte) is right that there got to be some arrangement with China,” he stressed.
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