posted June 02, 2020 at 09:30 pm by Alena Mae S. Flores
The Energy Department said Tuesday
the $4.5-billion Malampaya natural gas project in northwest Palawan will
continue to operate despite the low oil price regime that forced the Galoc oil
field to announce the suspension of operation.
Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said
there was “no threat” of Malampaya gas project shutdown as the project is
“completely different” from the Galoc oil field.
The joint venture that includes
Oriental Petroleum and Minerals Corp. earlier announced that production at the
Galoc oilfield would be suspended in September amid the low oil prices.
Cusi said the Malampaya gas project
under Service Contract 38, which powers natural gas power plants with a
combined capacity of around 3,000 megawatts, has existing gas purchase and
sales agreements with power generators.
He also said “there is demand” for
natural gas from Malampaya gas project where the government owns a 10-percent
stake through PNOC Exploration Corp.
The benchmark Dubai crude plummeted
by about 66 percent to $23 per barrel by end-March from $67 a barrel as of
end-December last year.
An industry source said oil and gas
firms were expecting oil prices to recover to $40 per barrel so that oil
exploration firms could recover their investments.
“There were huge losses per barrel
of oil produced at current price,” the source said.
“Once prices go beyond $40 and
stabilizes, it will be commercially viable to produce oil and gas again,” the
source said.
Oriental Petroleum, a joint venture
partner of Service Contract 14, Block C-1 (Galoc block), said in a disclosure
to the stock exchange Galoc Production Company set the cessation of the oil
field on Sept. 24.
This came after the issuance of the
termination notice from the floating production storage and offloading service
provider, Rubicon Offshore International.
“The matter has been relayed to the
DOE [Department of Energy] and is seeking approval of the initial drawdown on
the abandonment fund for the implementation of the suspension plan,” Oriental
Petroleum said.
Oriental Petroleum said GPC relayed
its total commitment to the long-term future of the Galoc asset “and is
currently evaluating several scenarios to retain flexibility for the earliest
possible production re-start as and when the market conditions improve.”
Galoc oil field has been in
production since 2008 and yielded nearly 20 million barrels. There are four
producing wells that flow into FPSO Rubicon Intrepid which has 450,000 barrels
of storage capacity.
Crude oil production from the Galoc
field has declined in recent years, averaging 2,100 barrels of oil per day last
year.
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