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  • Oil & Gas
16 September 2019

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  • Vietnam

Sept 16 (Reuters) – Australia-listed Liquefied Natural Gas Ltd said on Monday it signed a deal with a province in Vietnam to supply liquefied natural gas (LNG) from its Louisiana-based Magnolia project.

The Vietnam project includes an LNG import terminal, and a 32,000-megawatt combined-cycle power plant in the coastal province of Bac Lieu, where the Houston-based company will supply gas and Vietnam-based Delta Offshore Energy will generate electricity and sell it.

Two million tonnes of LNG per year will be supplied from its Magnolia project, which locks in a buyer for 25% of the supply from the project.

The deal comes at a time when LNG Ltd has been struggling to lock in sales agreements for its Magnolia project due to the U.S. trade dispute with China, which has been seen as a key potential customer for U.S. LNG projects.

“Our alliance with LNG Limited will allow the Government of Vietnam to have a stronger relationship with the U.S. market,” Bobby Quintos, engineering managing director for Delta Offshore Energy, said in a joint statement.

Pending government approvals, the project is expected to begin operations in 2023. (Reporting by Nikhil Kurian Nainan in Bengaluru, Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips)

  • Others
16 September 2019

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  • Philippines

MANILA (Reuters) – A nickel mining hub in the southern Philippines, which produces mostly high-grade material, has suspended extraction operations indefinitely as the regional government conducts an industry audit, a top government official told Reuters on Monday.

The government of Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) has suspended operations of all four mining companies in its jurisdiction, said Environment, Natural Resources and Energy Minister Abdulraof Abdul Macacua.

The Philippines was the world’s second-largest nickel ore producer in 2018 after Indonesia, with both Southeast Asian nations as the top two suppliers to biggest buyer China.

By next year, when Indonesia bans nickel ore exports, China is expected to rely mainly on the Philippines for supply of the material for stainless steel and electronic vehicle battery.

The suspension was based on a memorandum order dated Aug. 5 issued by the regional government, Macacua said in an e-mail reply to Reuters’ queries about the status of mining in the region’s Tawi-Tawi province.

Latest available industry data showed that 2.34 million wet metric tonnes (wmt) of high-grade ore, or nearly 90% of 2.66 million wmt of the high-grade material the Philippines exported to China in the first half of 2018 came from Tawi-Tawi.

Tawi-Tawi accounted for 27% of overall nickel ore exports, totaling 15.8 million wmt, to China during the six-month period.

“The suspension order was due to the ongoing review of mining policy in BARMM,” Macacua said.

The audit is being conducted as the local government prepares to push for the enactment of a Bangsamoro Responsible Mining Law that will serve as a road map for the region’s mining industry, Macacua said, without elaborating.

A “performance assessment and evaluation team” has been created to review the mining firms’ operations, with no definite timeline as to how long the suspension will be, he said.

The BARMM suspension order covers four mining companies actively operating in Tawi-Tawi out of seven that have been given permits, Macacua said, without identifying the four.

Tawi-Tawi is where SR Languyan Mining Corp, the country’s top supplier of high-grade material to China, operates.

SR Languyan is expected to shut its mining operations later this year as ore deposits at its project are nearly depleted, Jaynul Ali Sambarani, head of mines and geoscience services at BARMM’s environment ministry, told Reuters last month.

SR Languyan’s average monthly ore exports this year is around 416,500 wmt, Macacua said. There is no government data available about the size of ore deposits left at SR Languyan’s project.

The bulk of the Philippines’ total nickel ore output usually comes from the main mining region of Caraga, also in the south.

Philippine nickel miners may ramp up ore output by next year as they expect the Indonesian ore export ban and brisk demand to keep prices elevated.

Their production capacity, however, is limited by a number of factors, including government-imposed mining curbs, industry executives said at a Philippine mining conference last week.

  • Oil & Gas
16 September 2019

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  • Philippines

MANILA, Philippines – After drone attacks on Saudi Arabia’s oil facilities slashed the output of the world’s top producer by half, Philippine Foreign Secretary Tedoro “Teddyboy” Locsin Jr said the incident will affect the Philippines “deeply.”

“This is serious,” Locsin tweeted. “It will – not could – affect us deeply; to put it bluntly, an oil shortage or steep rise in oil price will rock the Philippine boat and tip it over.”

Oil prices soared more than 10% on Monday, September 16, after Tehran-backed Huthi rebels in neighboring Yemen hit two sites owned by Saudi state-run oil giant Aramco on Saturday, September 14, effectively shutting down 6% of the global oil supply. (READ: Drone strikes on Saudi Arabia ripple across oil market, diplomacy)

Tensions also heightened as US President Donald Trump blamed Iran for the attacks and raised the possibility of a military strike on the country. (READ: Trump says U.S. ‘locked and loaded’ to respond to Saudi oil attack)

Stable for now: According to the Department of Energy (DOE), the effects of the attacks on Saudi oil plants have yet to be felt on the Philippines as supplies remain sufficient.

DOE Oil Industry Management Bureau Assistant Director Rodela Romero said initial reports showed oil firms in the country had enough supply for now and that the agency was set to meet with representatives of local oil companies later this week to assess the situation further.

Base sa monitoring natin, may enough minimum inventory requirement sila base sa report nila. More than the minimum inventory requirement ang ating supply na nasa bansa,” Romero said in an interview with CNN Philippines.

(Based on our monitoring, oil companies reported having enough minimum inventory requirement. Current supply is more than the minimum requirement.)

Philippine Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi likewise sought to assure the public, saying concerned energy agencies were closely monitoring the situation after an emergency meeting was held on Sunday, September 15, at the Department of Energy’s headquarters in Taguig City.

“We are seeking to ensure that the energy family will be sufficiently prepared to face the potential impact of this unfortunate incident, if any, on the country,” Cusi said on Monday.

The agency reiterated impact of the incident was still premature and that impact on prices, if any, may be felt by Tuesday next week. Despite this, Senator Win Gatchalian said the DOE should “formulate a contingency plan that will temporarily replace Saudi oil in the short term until supply is normalized.”

Gatchalian added the incident highlighted the need for DOE to diversify the Philippines’ oil supplier portfolio as some 33.7% of the Philippines’ crude oil is imported from Saudi Arabia as of 2018, making it the country’s top source.

Impact of attacks: According to Middle East expert James Dorsey from the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore, attacks on Saudi oil plants were most likely to affect the Philippines economically.

“Worst case scenario would mainly be economic. You’ll have a higher energy bill and that’s going to impact the economy,” Dorsey told Rappler in an interview. As for how long price hikes across the world would last, Dorsey said this would ultimately depend on Saudi’s efforts to mitigate the effect of strikes on oil facilities.

Beyond this, Dorsey said, larger developments in the Southeast Asian region may depend on how the Yemen war evolves.

This is because the Yemen war resonates strongly in Southeast Asia where there are Muslim communities of Yemeni origin. Divisions within Muslim communities across the region, particularly towards Saudis, may also reverberate, he said.

Following this, Dorsey said Southeast Asian leaders should remember to engage with various Muslim communities in their countries moving forward.

Prior to the attacks on Saudi oil plants, Huthi rebels earlier claimed attacks on other facilities were “retaliation” for the Riyadh-led bombing campaign on rebel-held areas in Yemen. – with reports from Agence France-Presse/Rappler.com

  • Oil & Gas
15 September 2019

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  • Thailand

BANGKOK (Reuters) – Thailand’s energy minister said on Sunday the drone attacks on oil facilities in Saudi Arabia, the world’s top exporter, would have no impact on Thai oil imports.

Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthi group claimed responsibility for Saturday’s drone attacks on two facilities of state-run oil company Saudi Aramco at the heart of the kingdom’s oil industry, knocking out more than half of Saudi oil output.

Aramco, whose CEO said the situation had been brought under control, has contracts with Thailand’s state-controlled PTT Pcl.

“There is no impact on exports yet as the attacked facilities are in the deserts, which doesn’t affect the oil depot that supplies to PTT Group, so there is no impact on Thailand’s oil imports yet,” Thai energy minister Sontirat Sontijirawong said in a statement.

“Overall Thailand has enough reserves in crude oil, in-transit crude oil, and petroleum products, and there will be no short-term shortages in the event that Saudi Arabia’s oil exports are affected,” Sontirat added.

The ministry has reached out to Aramco after the attacks, but told Reuters that it has not yet received official response from the oil company.

Saudi Arabia is the world’s biggest oil exporter, shipping more than 7 million barrels of oil to global destinations every day.

  • Energy Cooperation
15 September 2019

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  • Brunei Darussalam

MANILA, Philippines — Independent oil firm Phoenix Petroleum Philippines Inc. is strengthening its network in the Southeast Asian region after it forged a deal to source liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) from Brunei.

In a disclosure, Phoenix said its wholly owned subsidiary PNX Petroleum Singapore Pte Ltd. signed a partnership with Hengyi Industries International Pte Ltd. (HYII).

The partnership will allow Phoenix to source LPG from Hengyi Brunei refinery’s future production.

This latest LPG venture is expected to support Phoenix’s LPG expansion in both the Philippines and Vietnam.

Phoenix said the offtake agreement is expected to start within the year.

In preparation for the venture, the oil firm acquired PNX Conqueror—which is the company’s first pressurized LPG carrier with 2.5 kilo tons (kT) capacity—and has a long-term charter of Chelsea, another large pressurized vessel with 4.6 kT capacity.

“As we continue to expand the brand internationally and establish strong connections with complementary businesses from neighboring countries, we are relentless in forging ties with companies like HYII to be able to provide quality products and services to more and more communities,” PNX Petroleum Singapore director Henry Albert Fadullon said.

“With another milestone partnership, we are optimistic and excited about the future of this project as it opens new opportunities and possibilities for growth and progress for both companies and countries,” he said.

Given the close proximity between the two countries, the partnership is expected to improve the Philippines’ overall supply situation as Brunei would only need a day to deliver its supply to the country.

The venture would also beef up Phoenix’s petroleum source from its usual suppliers—China, Vietnam, Korea, and Middle East, among others.

Phoenix entered the LPG business in August 2017 when it acquired Petronas Energy Philippines Inc. (PEPI), now PLPI and renamed Petronas LPG to Phoenix Super LPG to reflect its brand.

Since them it has been growing its LPG business through its subsidiaries. Earlier this year, subsidiary PNX Energy International Holdings, Pte Ltd. entered the Vietnam LPG market through the establishment of Phoenix Vietnam Pte. Ltd.

Read more at https://www.philstar.com/business/2019/09/15/1951778/phoenix-partners-brunei-lpg-firm#eRuutFTMSEkEDHAe.99

  • Energy Cooperation
15 September 2019

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  • Singapore

The island province of Catanduanes in the Bicol region has signed a deal with a Singapore technology group in hopes of addressing its twin problems of waste disposal and energy.

Catanduanes officials, joined by their lone  district Representative Hector Sanchez, recently signed a memorandum of understanding with green energy specialist Opus Energy Solutions Inc. together with Singapore Management Consultancy.

Under the MOU, Opus Energy Solutions Inc. and Singapore Management Consultancy will bring to the province Singapore’s emissions standard that maximizes the conversion of solid waste from landfill and other collection facilities into electricity. Its by-products can also be utilized for other useful purposes.

Mr. Rafael Javier Eubra, President-CEO of Opus Strategic Business Group highlighted that their consortium’s 36 years of accumulated experience in energy industry, particularly in addressing major energy, waste, and water problems.

“What we want to bring in is a technology that can address a lot of fundamental issues related to the basic necessities faced by the Philippines today,” Eubra said.

Eubra claimed that one of the designs of Opus Energy Solution had been endorsed by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) and has a buyback agreement with National Power Corporation (Napocor).

“We get endorsements from these government agencies. So, with the MOU, we are to build a power plant—a waste-to-energy power plant—in Catanduanes,” Eubra added.

The process includes the recovery of solid wastes and transform it into useful energy in the most efficient, safest, and commercially viable way possible.

He added that this environment-friendly facility that will be set up in Catanduanes is different from other power plants that are running on petrol or coal.

“What we use in our power plant is solid waste and convert it to electricity,” Eubra said. —Gwen Salamida/LBG, GMA News

  • Energy Cooperation
  • Renewables
15 September 2019

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  • Vietnam

Scandinavian investment taps into Vietnam’s booming solar power market

Thomas Jakobsen, based in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) since 2005, is Managing Director of Indochina Energy Partners (IEP), an entity focused on renewable energy in Southeast Asia’s emerging countries.

Thomas Jakobsen, Managing Director of Indochina Energy Partners (IEP). Photo: Joakim Persson

Singapore-registered IEP is currently focusing on rolling out rooftop solar projects in Vietnam, Cambodia and Myanmar.

In Vietnam, IEP is successful especially in the rooftop PV (photovoltaic system) solar sector, using Scandinavian investment money for their Build-Own-Operate-Transfer (BOOT) solar rental/lease model.

“Solar is, due to legislation, being implemented in the relevant countries that we’re looking at, and in fact that the cost for energy produced by solar has fallen so dramatically that while it didn’t make economic sense to look at it three years ago it makes very good economic sense today,” begins Thomas.

When Thomas first arrived in Vietnam he worked for furniture company Tropicdane before continuing with infrastructure finance for a fund called Anfa capital.

“In 2015 I was offered to join Saigon Asset Management – whom I knew from their history with Anfa Capital – specifically to do renewable energy originally in Myanmar, which was seen as the up-and-coming country at the time, and still is, in many ways.”

Specifically for roof-top PV solar, IEP provides installation, maintenance and financing solutions for commercial and industrial factory owners.

“There are many ways to get exposed to a market, in this case the solar; you could invest in developers; manufacturing of components, solar panels, mounting systems etc. What we have chosen to do is to invest in projects only. So we go out to owners of big rooftops and offer them to build and maintain a rooftop solar system for a number of years, free of charge to them, until they take it over. We sell them the power, at a fixed price that is lower than their current one for the period of the agreement, which typically lasts between 10 to 15 years – it depends on what segment you are in. This is all done with Scandinavian money behind us and with Northern-European technology, engineering and design.”

“We also have some demands to potential counterparts: they must be of very high credit worthiness, because we’re not in the business of taking on very high credit risks. We’re ensuring that rooftop solar systems work technically for the project lifetime and thereby make savings for the rooftop owner and give us returns,” adds Thomas.

Photo: Carl Attard

Rooftop solar market essential

According to Vietnam Investment Review, Vietnam’s energy demand is projected to increase by more than 10 per cent annually in the next five years and its required power capacity to double. The country is therefore moving to diversify its energy mix, staking on renewables, where he rooftop solar market then becomes an essential part.

In June 2019, Việt Nam Electricity (EVN) group agreed to continue the current feed-in tariff (FiT) rate at 9.35 US cents per kWh for rooftop solar power projects nationwide until 2021. Another 121 projects will begin to generate electricity by 2020, while 211 are in the pipeline – a volume that has exceeded the targets.

“Just a few years back, the cost of a kilowatt coming out of a solar installation was 15-20 US cents, meaning that it would make no sense from someone who could buy electricity from the government for about 6-7 cents to install at those prices. To do it as economically viable repeatable installations – where nearly only the sky is the limit when we talk volume – you need to have what we call grid parity. This means that the cost of electricity from an energy source – in this case rooftop solar – has to be at the same cost level as the electricity from the grid,” the Dane explains.

“We see that the economics are so good in solar now that it’s possible that we will soon launch a second fund.”

“We can offer it at slightly lower price and that in a country where the electricity prices are already on the lower end. But that’s part of the government’s very consistent policy to encourage investors to set up factories here. To do that becomes more attractive if electricity prices are kept low.”

“And this is a way of just cutting the top off the growth of the electricity demand from the export industry by every new factory only demanding 80 per cent instead of 100 of grid electricity.”

“We always go in with a price that is slightly lower, to have an incentive. And the economics make sense now; it depends a little bit on the characteristics of the rooftop.”

Their market is focused on private buildings; old or new. A larger rooftop surface is preferred and IEP focuses on the southern half of Vietnam from a geographic and solar point of view.

“I would not run out of work anytime soon, for sure, by segmenting the market like that,” he claims.

The annual radiation measured in the Southern region and South Central provinces is approximately 1,600 kWh/m2, according to a World Bank report on the rooftop solar energy’s potential in Vietnam. The potential of solar energy in Ho Chi Minh City is about 6,300 MW.

Meanwhile, Southern Vietnam is anticipated to face power shortages of up to 3.7 billion kWh in 2021, nearly 10 billion kWh in 2022 and approximately 12 billion kWh in 2023, according to Electricity of Vietnam (EVN)! Consequently there is a huge need for solar energy!

Targeted solar power development in Vietnam is as follows: 2020: 850 MW, 2025: 4000 MW, and 2030: 12,000 MW.

Rooftop solar. Photo: Bernd Sieker.

Solar most scalable

“We are obviously following all four renewable technologies constantly. The advantage we have in solar is that it’s nearly perfectly scalable so we can also choose to make very big projects – one hundred million dollar investments – and sell to the grid. That is one of reasons why we like to operate in this market.”

“Doing wind projects you cannot scale a one hundred million dollar project down to a one million dollar project – it makes no sense. If we at a later stage or in a country come to the opinion that offering grid installations of 50 or 100 million dollars it is the best option, then that can easily be scaled up, it’s just a matter of doing the same thing many times,” he elaborates further.

Asked to give his take also on the potential for biogas Thomas also shares his insights: “We spent a lot of time back in 2011-2013 looking at biogas systems. Biogas has some advantages; number one being that you probably solve a water pollution problem at the same time. That has value but it can be difficult to monetize that value and request payment also for that service.”

“It is very much a cost issue; if the technology costs so much compared to the output of energy.”

“Biogas also has some quite limited scalability where it works that you instead have to repeat the projects,” adds Thomas.

Electricity generated from biogas also has a high CO2 value but after the European carbon emissions trading market collapsed the financing for biogas projects actually died, he explains.

Nordcham/Eurcham a business gateway

Thomas is also Vice Chairman in rejuvenated Nordcham (Nordic Chamber of Commerce) Vietnam, which also entitles each member company automatic Eurocham Vietnam membership.

“We were helped into exclusive renewable energy technical exhibitions, with a very good setup. And we could thereby develop our database in a way we would not have been able to without Eurocham,” says Thomas.

Eurocham also offers incubator services and Intellectual Property protection assistance.

“In Eurocham a lot of the work goes on in the sector committees, where all advocacy work is coordinated and where the very close networking and business dealing gets done. There we’re down to where people are in very similar industries and get to know each other over a number of years.”

While the Danish business community has always been relatively big in Vietnam compared to its size, much thanks to Denmark’s former massive development aid there, seeding a lot of companies to come, the presences from the remaining Nordic countries were up until recently very small.

“There was not this undergrowth of SMEs from those countries – but we are now seeing that coming to a much higher extent from the other Nordics. Vietnam is now becoming an easier country to do business in. There is still a cost difference compared to doing business in China.”

Thomas explains that the differential cost towards Asia is also turning more significant now for Eastern-European based production (with costs going up there) and when taking geopolitics into account.

“If you are looking at moving to Asia, Vietnam has to be on anybody’s list. Whether you come to do export business here or to satisfy local demand I think it’s very difficult today getting away with saying in one’s headquarters that one has done all the research one needs on Southeast Asia but excluded Vietnam,” states Thomas.

Better education for children

When Thomas personally came to Asia for the first time at the age of 25 in the mid-1990s – sent to China by a Danish company – he fell in love with it. Much later he got a new chance to return to Asia

“It was always at the back of my mind that somehow the career had to steer towards an Asian opportunity. Whether it was to be Vietnam, Thailand or Malaysia – there was no specific plan on that. The fact it became Vietnam was due to that the country had a high focus in Denmark, compared to other countries in Asean.

On a short business trip, prior to moving there, he had seen the country and found it to be like in China back when it was just about to take off – which he found to be an attractive aspect.

He also highlights another benefit of living in a city like Saigon in Southeast Asia: “If I were to go back to Denmark it would mean that my son would get significantly lower education than he can get out here, which is not something that people always think of: ‘Let’s move to Vietnam and let our children get the best education possible!’ But because there are capable and willing customers in this market [for high quality international schools] it means it is actually possible!”

  • Others
15 September 2019

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  • Philippines

(FPRI) — About 80 km off the northwest coast of Palawan Island in the South China Sea is the Malampaya natural gas field, the Philippines’ main domestic source of energy. Once piped ashore, its natural gas fuels five power plants, which provide half of the electricity supply for the Philippines’ most populous island of Luzon and the national capital of Manila. But by the mid-to-late 2020s, Malampaya is expected to run dry. If the Philippines is to keep Luzon’s lights on and its national economy growing, then it will need to develop new sources of energy before the current one is depleted.

Given the Philippines’ desire to phase out its coal-fired power plants and the small size and relatively high cost of renewable ones, the country’s only reliable and cost-effective source of energy is natural gas. But with no onshore reserves, that means turning to the waters of the South China Sea. Unfortunately for the Philippines, most energy companies have refrained from bidding on the offshore blocks that Manila has offered. The reason why is not because they fear that the blocks will yield no economically viable natural gas reserves. Rather, it is because they do not want to bear the security risks that come with energy exploration in waters that are within or even close to China’s self-proclaimed nine-dashed line in the South China Sea. In view of China’s recent aggressive behavior toward foreign exploration vessels, that is understandable.

Swerving Strategies

How to deal with China in the South China Sea is an issue that has dogged Philippine leaders since China occupied Philippine-claimed Mischief Reef in 1994. Over the years, they have responded with very different strategies. In 2011, then-Philippine President Benigno Aquino took a hard line. He procured $118 million in additional military spending to specifically defend Malampaya.[1] He also boosted military cooperation with the United States and took China to task over its South China Sea claims at the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA), which ruled in the Philippines’ favor in 2016.

But immediately after the ruling, Aquino’s successor, Rodrigo Duterte, abruptly changed course. Instead of confronting China, he sought to accommodate it. He reasoned that Manila could get far more from Beijing with a carrot than a stick. And so, he “separated” the Philippines from the United States, set aside the PCA ruling, and ordered his administration to find a way by which China and the Philippines could conduct joint energy exploration in the South China Sea. A year later, Duterte outlined a deal to do so near Reed Bank, a part of the South China Sea which both countries claim. Both have also been interested in energy exploration there; China surveyed the area in the late 2000s, and the Philippines followed suit in the early 2010s.

Initially, China was receptive to such a deal, but negotiations between the two countries have ground to a standstill. Manila has sought a deal whereby Chinese and Philippine oil companies would conduct joint energy exploration of Reed Bank, presumably under the auspices of the Philippine government. However, from Beijing’s perspective, that would be tantamount to accepting Philippine sovereignty there. Moreover, Beijing is probably none too keen on Manila’s desire to keep 60 percent of the net profits from any joint venture, a stipulation under Philippine law governing natural resource deals with foreign entities.

In the meantime, China militarized the islands that it occupies in the Spratly archipelago; Chinese navy and coast guard ships have routinely sailed within the 12-nautical mile limit of the Philippines’ territorial waters; and Chinese vessels continue to harass Philippine fishing boats in the South China Sea. In one case in June 2019, a Chinese vessel, suspected to be part of China’s maritime militia, rammed a Philippine fishing boat, sinking it and leaving its 22 Filipino sailors adrift at sea. (Eventually, a Vietnamese boat rescued the survivors.) The incident, near Reed Bank, forced Duterte to take some action. In August, he ordered that all foreign ships sailing through Philippine waters must gain permission from Manila first. Whether Chinese ships will comply remains to be seen. But that seems unlikely if recent Chinese maritime behavior is any indication.

In May and again in July, a Chinese coast guard ship repeatedly interfered with Malaysia’s energy exploration and production activities near Luconia Shoals, off the coast of Borneo. At about the same time, China sent the Haiyang Dizhi 8, a survey ship, into the waters off Vietnam. That triggered a tense week-long standoff between Vietnamese naval and Chinese coast guard vessels. After the Haiyang Dizhi 8 withdrew, tensions subsided. But a month later, it returned and sailed even closer to Vietnam’s coastline. Taken together with the June revelation that China likely conducted an anti-ship missile test in the South China Sea, it would seem that Beijing has little interest in being conciliatory.

Doubling Down, Again

Throughout his tenure in office, Duterte has had to play down aggressive Chinese behavior as part of his accommodative policy toward China. When China built military facilities in the Spratly Islands, Duterte tried to deflect public concern by claiming that the facilities were directed against the United States and would have no impact on Philippine claims in the South China Sea. He also blamed his predecessors for their failure to build stronger military forces that he could have used to deter China. Their laxity, he argues, is what has limited his options in dealing with China.

Hence, Duterte has not given up on his pro-China strategy. Duterte visited Beijing in August 2019 in another attempt to make something of it. Perhaps through face-to-face discussions, Duterte could persuade Chinese Chairman Xi Jinping to rein in his country’s maritime conduct in the South China Sea. To press home his point and probably to placate his domestic critics, Duterte brought up the PCA ruling with Xi. Unsurprisingly, Xi brushed it aside. “We will not budge,” he responded according to Duterte. “We own [the South China Sea]. Why should we talk to you?

By the end of their meeting, the two leaders papered over their differences and affirmed their mutual interest in joint development of energy resources in the South China Sea. Indeed, they pledged to “form committees to advance oil exploration talks.” Of course, it was not the first time they said they would do so. Duterte and Xi even signed a memorandum of understanding to do just that in November 2018. Clearly little progress has been made in the intervening ten months. And, while China can afford to wait for the right conditions to strike a deal, the Philippines does not have the luxury of time.

Digging a Deeper Hole

The clock continues to tick on Malampaya. The Philippines Department of Energy has tried to entice energy companies to bid on exploration blocks near Malampaya and elsewhere in the South China Sea, but to no avail.[2] With China’s fortified islands and warships just over the horizon, only Shell, which operates the offshore platform atop Malampaya, has expressed any interest in doing so. With no other competing bidders, Shell is likely to angle for economic concessions from Manila to compensate it for the security risks it will have to assume.

All that puts pressure on Duterte to do something to improve the Philippines’ perilous energy security situation. No doubt that is why he has continued to push for some sort of deal with China. While that deal remains elusive for the moment, some of Duterte’s domestic critics worry about what might happen if he is successful. They fear that Duterte could strike a deal with China that would implicitly legitimize Chinese claims in the South China Sea and undermine the Philippines’ hard-fought legal victory at the PCA. No matter what, any deal with China to produce natural gas in the South China Sea would leave the Philippines, at least in some part, reliant on China for its energy.

A successful deal could also be a cause for concern among other claimants in the South China Sea, like Malaysia and Vietnam. With a joint energy exploration deal in hand, China could pressure them into similar arrangements. Such a deal might even help strengthen China’s position in the ongoing negotiations over the code of conduct in the South China Sea between China and the countries of ASEAN.

On the other hand, should no deal with China transpire, any Philippines-sanctioned energy exploration activity in the South China Sea would likely face active Chinese harassment. As a result, the trouble the Philippines has had in attracting energy companies to explore in the region’s waters is unlikely to change. More likely, the whole area, including Reed Bank, would remain unexplored. That would ultimately drive the Philippines to search for new sources of energy abroad.

Terminal Dependence

The most readily available source of energy for the Philippines is ship-borne liquefied natural gas (LNG) from places like Australia, the United Arab Emirates, and the United States. Sensing that opportunity, several companies have laid plans to build LNG regasification terminals in the Philippines. Costing hundreds of millions of dollars, such terminals convert transported LNG back into its gaseous state for use in power plants and homes.

While that may sound like a good solution, it is also a solution that makes the Philippines dependent on foreign energy. No longer producing its own natural gas, the Philippines would become more exposed to factors that are beyond its control, from volatile LNG prices to political risk. While the Philippines can somewhat mitigate price risk with long-term futures contracts, it cannot avoid the added costs from the construction of expensive LNG terminals. As for political risk, the Philippines would be wise to carefully consider from which countries it obtains its natural gas supply. Clearly many Eastern Europeans wished they were not as dependent as they are on Russia for their natural gas.

Of course, if Duterte successfully strikes a deal with China to explore for and produce offshore natural gas, LNG terminal investments in the Philippines could suffer. Indeed, investors in LNG terminals must bet that either no deal will come to pass or that Philippine energy demand will outstrip any potential offshore production in the South China Sea. Looking ahead, three efforts have already received Manila’s approval to build LNG terminals since late 2018.[3] One is led by First Gen, a Philippine power firm, and Japan’s Tokyo Gas. Another is led by Australia’s Energy World Corporation. And the last is led by China National Offshore Oil Company (CNOOC), one of China’s three giant state-owned energy firms. Recently, the Philippine National Oil Company, the Philippines’ state-owned counterpart, joined CNOOC’s effort. All have laid out cautious plans, and, so far, none have progressed beyond the earliest stages of construction.

Peculiarly, China would stand to benefit in two ways if it continues to stymie Philippine energy exploration and production in the South China Sea. First, CNOOC’s costly investment in a new LNG terminal would have a far better chance of paying off. Second, the Philippines could become dependent on CNOOC’s (presumably Chinese) supply of natural gas. (Of course, it would be particularly galling to Filipinos if CNOOC, one day, chose to source its LNG from a Chinese-controlled offshore natural gas field in the South China Sea.)

Regardless of whether the newly formed committees between China and the Philippines reach an agreement to jointly explore the South China Sea by November, as the Philippine ambassador to China hopes, the outlook for Philippine energy security will remain murky. Duterte is correct: he does have few options available to him. But simply pointing out that fact does little for the Philippines. His predecessor, Aquino, arguably started with an even weaker hand than Duterte did. But Aquino cleverly overcame that weakness by using the PCA to bring international pressure on China and constrain its actions in the South China Sea. Duterte may have few options, but he is likely to have even fewer in the future unless he makes more of them.

*About the author: Felix K. Chang is a senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute. He is also the Chief Strategy Officer of DecisionQ, a predictive analytics company in the national security and healthcare industries.

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