YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Myanmar plans to put over 20 offshore oil and
gas exploration blocks up for auction by April as the country pushes to
attract foreign investment and expertise to help overcome an energy
deficit that's a legacy of gas export deals made by its former military
rulers.
Myanmar produces more than enough natural gas, which is its
primary source of energy after biomass, to meet domestic needs. But it
exports about 80 percent of the 1.2 to 1.4 billion cubic feet of gas it
produces each day to Thailand under contracts signed by Myanmar's old
authoritarian military rulers.
A new gas pipeline to China, which
may not be able to commence operations in June as scheduled because of a
recent outbreak of violence in Myanmar's northeast, would initially
send an additional 400 million cubic feet of natural gas per day out of
the country. Eventually, that could rise to 1.2 billion cubic feet per
day, government officials said.
That leaves Myanmar with about
half of the natural gas it needs to meet domestic demand. If it didn't
export so much, it could easily meet its domestic needs, which are
expected to rise from 471 million cubic feet per day in the fiscal year
that ends March 31 to 918 million cubic feet per day next fiscal year,
according to Ministry of Energy statistics.
Any new discoveries, he said, "will be prioritized toward domestic supply."
Zaw
Aung said decisions on the onshore bids probably won't be finalized
until November. In the meantime, he said his office — understaffed, with
just a half dozen people to handle the bids — would work as quickly as
possible to open the offshore round.
Terms of the offshore bids
haven't yet been finalized. Foreign companies "definitely" will have to
work with a local partner for onshore and shallow water blocks, but no
decision has yet been made as to whether foreign players will be allowed
to take a 100 percent interest in the technically more complex
deep-water blocks, Zaw Aung said.
Myanmar's energy
sector today reflects the larger drama of a country struggling to change
course, while still honoring contracts made by previous regimes on
often unfavorable terms. The struggle to balance old commitments with
new values and new freedoms can be seen around the country. A violent
crackdown on protests against the Letpadaung copper mine in northwestern
Myanmar — which is jointly owned by a Chinese company and a company
owned by the Myanmar military — has triggered an official inquiry led by
opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. And farmers who claim their land
was seized by the country's old military junta are waging countless
smaller battles to get their property back.
Ministry of Energy
officials say that when those gas export contracts were negotiated, the
world was a very different place. Back in 1998 and 2000, when Myanmar
made its first big offshore gas discoveries, the moribund domestic
economy meant demand for natural gas was low. Even today, 69 percent of
domestic energy consumption comes from biomass, like wood. Meanwhile,
the country, struggling under Western sanctions, badly needed foreign
currency.
Those contracts, which mandate that 20 percent of
production be kept for domestic use, could well be renegotiated, but the
government must proceed carefully as it balances domestic complaints
with the need to reassure foreign investors that their contracts will be
honored.
"Now with development, we need oil and gas for domestic
use," Htin Aung, Myanmar's Deputy Minister of Energy, said in an
interview. "But we have signed the agreement and we are abiding by our
commitments."
China is poised to become a major importer as well.
Htin Aung said China's 495 mile gas pipeline, which connects the Bay of
Bengal with Yunnan province in southwest China, will start operations
in June, while a parallel 481 mile oil pipeline will begin pumping in
September.
The pipelines are strategically important to China,
which now routes most energy imports through the narrow Strait of
Malacca and wants to develop an alternate supply route. The pipelines
pass through an area of northeastern Myanmar where violence recently
broke out between the government and ethnic Kachin fighters who want
greater self-rule. China has been concerned about the skirmishes and
brokered peace talks between the two sides in February.
Htin Aung
insisted that there would be no delays to the pipelines because of
fighting in Kachin and Shan states, but another ministry official,
speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak
with the press, said the violence, along with regulatory delays, could
push back the start of operations to the end of the year.
"In northeast Myanmar, there is violence, so there is delay in our projects," he said.
For now, the Ministry of Energy is betting on new discoveries to close the country's energy gap.
The
government plans to open bids for offshore blocks by April, Zaw Aung,
the director of planning at Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise — the
government's exploration and production arm — told delegates at the
Myanmar Upstream Summit oil and gas conference in Yangon on Monday.
Foreign firms are more interested in Myanmar's offshore blocks, which
have greater potential, than in the 18 onshore blocks the Ministry of
Energy placed on the auction block in January. The government also plans
to drill over 300 new wells itself in the next five years, Zaw Aung
said.
source: USNews
http://www.usnews.com/news/business/articles/2013/03/04/myanmar-to-open-offshore-oil-and-gas-bids-by-april?page=2
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