Luzon to go dark as Malampaya exploration suspended photo power Philippines
Power Energy

Luzon to go dark as Malampaya exploration suspended

May 2, 2022, 7:31 AM
Rose De La Cruz

Rose De La Cruz

Writer/Columnist

Luzon may suffer massive blackouts soon because of the continued suspension of exploration activities in Malampaya and Sampaguita oil fields because of pressures from China.

Because of Chinese intimidation at the West Philippine Sea, the government opted to suspend exploration activities in the Malampaya gas field, which would result in Luzon-wide blackouts due to lack of supply to the grid.

Surigao del Sur Rep. Johnny Pimentel said such blackouts will occur in the near future once supply from Malampaya gas field runs out. Malampaya supplies 20 percent of the country’s energy needs.

Without fresh reserves from potential gas fields including the Sampaguita project in Reed Bank, Luzon’s power supply is threatened, Pimentel stressed.

“The rest of the country is also worried about the prospect of a Luzon power shortage” said Pimentel who chairs the House Strategic Intelligence Committee said.
“We are anxious that if Luzon sneezes, Mindanao and the Visayas might catch a cold.”

Pimentel noted that the Sampaguita gas field has been dubbed as the next Malampaya because the undeveloped hydrocarbon field below the seabed is located 250 kilometers southwest of Malampaya, Business World reported.

“Sampaguita is estimated to contain anywhere from 3.5 to 4.6 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of gas. This is comparable to if not bigger than Malampaya’s 3.4 tcf of gas upon discovery,” he said.

Import LNG

The country may have to import liquefied natural gas if no alternative is found for Malampaya’s dwindling reserves, he added.

The Department of Energy (DoE) last month suspended oil exploration activities in the West Philippine Sea, a month after President Duterte said he had received a warning from China after word spread that some companies had plans in the Reed Bank, locally known as Recto Bank.

Service Contracts (SC) 72 and 75 were put on hold. The Sampaguita gas field is within SC 72 or the Recto Bank basin concession.

The Security, Justice and Peace Coordinating Cluster has considered the political, diplomatic and national security implications of any activity in the South China Sea, DoE said.

The tough-talking leader said he was reminded by someone from China to honor their joint exploration agreement if the Philippines did not want to suffer the consequences.

“There’s no other way to put it,” Pimentel said. “Our energy security is being held hostage by China, even though the two petroleum service contracts cover areas well within our exclusive economic zone.”

The Chinese Embassy did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

Reed Bank belongs to the Phl.

Under a 2016 United Nations-backed arbitral ruling, which China refuses to recognize, the Reed Bank is part of the Philippines’s exclusive economic zone and continental shelf.

PXP Energy Corp., the operator under SC 75, and its subsidiary Forum Energy Ltd., the operator under SC 72, has invoked a force majeure, canceling drilling activities in Sampaguita scheduled this year.

Before the latest force majeure, the DoE had given Forum until Oct. 16 to drill its two commitment wells in Sampaguita at a cost of $100 million (P5.2 billion).

Economic and maritime experts have warned that halting oil exploration activities in parts of the WPS claimed by the Philippines would push companies to rethink their investments in the area.

They issued the warning after the DoE ordered listed PXP Energy Corp. to put on hold its exploration activities in its service contracts until it gets a clearance from a Cabinet cluster overseeing diplomatic and national security concerns.

“Other service contractors have seen what happened to PXP, which already has a long-standing contract and the best prospects for development,” said Jay L. Batongbacal, a maritime expert from the University of the Philippines. “If despite that, the Philippines remains unwilling to commit to the contract, I expect those other contractors to start thinking twice.”

Batongbacal said potential investors in the country’s energy sector would probably reconsider offshore petroleum exploration and other related investments in the WPS.

Favoring China

He said the Philippine government’s flip-flopping on the exploration project is a sign that it was highly favoring China’s demands.

In 2020, the DoE, with Duterte’s approval, issued a resume-to-work notice to the service contractors conducting oil exploration in the areas of service contracts 59, 72 and 75.

Current and potential investors would look to the next administration for policy clarity on these questions because they can’t rely on tentative, shifting decisions on these concerns, said Terry L. Ridon, convenor of infrastructure and investment think tank InfraWatchPH.

Tags: #Luzonblackouts, #WPS, #Malampayagasfield, #suspendedexploration, #energy


We take a stand
OpinYon News logo

Designed and developed by Simmer Studios.

© 2024 OpinYon News. All rights reserved.