Danessa
Rivera- May 3, 2020 - 12:00am
MANILA,
Philippines — The Department of Energy (DOE) expects exploration companies to
rethink their plans as oil prices are seen to remain low until the third
quarter due to the coronavirus pandemic.
In an
interview with ANC, Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said demand for fuel
would remain low as restrictions in travel and commuting continue.
“We are
seeing lower demand from consumers. There will still be restrictions of people,
on the mobility of the people. Gatherings, events that will still be restricted
and that will affect the demand for oil,” Cusi said.
Moody’s
Investors Service said global demand for fuel will remain depressed for the
rest of the first half but it sees some slow recovery in the second half as
economies start to open up again. This will be a plus for the Philippines
as the country relies heavily on oil imports.
Cusi
noted that the low oil price environment globally could derail the
development of the country’s oil and gas sector.
“Because
of the low price of oil, these exploration companies will again take time to
think and see their options. Just like the US, which is experiencing a negative
price, they’re practically giving oil for free. So these exploration companies
will rethink their options,” Cusi said.
The
Philippines has fallen behind in the ASEAN region as peer countries have been
drilling much more than the country. It has not seen investments in the
sector since the Malampaya deepwater gas-to-power project as oil and gas
exploration and development is capital intensive.
The DOE
launched the Philippine Conventional Energy Contracting Program (PCECP) in
November 2018 to help reinvigorate petroleum exploration and development
activities in the Philippines.
Under the
PCECP, the DOE offered 14 predetermined areas (PDAs), and the option for
investors to propose their own exploration area, making oil and gas exploration
a dynamic investment prospect for players in the energy sector.
Of the 14
PDAs, the agency only received four bids amid challenges in the country’s
upstream sector.
The DOE
will continue marketing the PDAs without offers to investors. It also
maintained its timeline on the nominated exploration areas under PCECP as it
received four nominated areas.
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