Date
Published 08/21/2019
The Department of
Energy (DOE) is firming up the submission of “final recommendations” on the
targeted license extension of the multi-billion Malampaya deep water gas field
project by the end of the year.
DOE Assistant Secretary
Leonido J. Pulido III disclosed that Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi has
instructed the department’s Energy Resource Development Bureau (ERDB) “to come
up with recommendation before the end of the year.”
The context of studies
being carried out, he said, leans on “whether or not it’s commercially viable
for another operator to come in,” albeit he qualified that “it might not be.”
The other instruction
given by Cusi to the ERDB is for the team “to determine whether the data
submitted is verifiable and if it’s correct.”
To recall, Shell
Philippines Exploration B.V., which is the lead operator in the Malampaya
consortium, previously indicated that the gas field can still produce gas until
2029-2030 at a scale that could meet the fuel requirements of the existing
3,200 megawatts of gas-fed power facilities in the country.
When asked if a
government takeover is still in the cards, Pulido said “I don’t think that’s on
the table,” although he noted that “possibilities are still open,” including
that proposition.
From the
recommendations that the ERDB will be submitting to the Secretary, the
department will solidify a decision on the license extension bid of the
Malampaya consortium – and if ever, what will be the most feasible track to
undertake for such.
The next step for DOE
will be to forward its own recommendation to the Office of the President – as
it is only the President of the country that can sign service contracts for
petroleum exploration investments.
“The Secretary would
have to decide. But at the end of the day, it will be the Office of the
President that will make that final decision,” Pulido said.
The Malampaya
consortium’s application for license extension has been strung up since the
past administration, but with the field’s Service Contract 38 expiring in 2024,
a serious decision has to be rendered by the current government leadership if
it still wants the country’s only commercial gas field to continually
contribute to its energy needs.
To extract additional
gas from the field, the operator will need time leeway to do additional
drilling and pursue developments so gas will ceaselessly flow from Malampaya
beyond 2024.
And that timeline is
almost exhausted now – especially with forecasts that production decline at the
gas field may start by 2022 or just more than two years from this time.
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