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Thursday, June 17, 2010

BLOCK L & BLOCK M EPISODE - WHO BENEFITS ?

Who owns nearly US$300 billion (RM982.2 billion) of undersea crude? Malaysia or Brunei? Or both?

On March 16, 2009, the governments of Brunei and Malaysia exchanged letters that essentially meant Brunei had abandoned its claim to a nondescript 7,800sq-km patch of mud flats and mangrove swamps called Limbang, which had been claimed by both for two decades.

azlanOver the last three months, however, the agreement appears to have blown up in Malaysia's face with accusations that two exploration blocks in the South China Sea which were ceded to Brunei in the letters may contain anywhere from one to four billion barrels of crude.

Thus, at the current price of US$74.20 (US$1 = RM3.274) per barrel, critics argue, Malaysia may have ceded anywhere from US$74.2 billion to US$296.8 billion in revenue to the tiny sultanate - or more. Crude hit a record US$147.27 per barrel on July 11, 2008, before falling back as the world financial crisis hit.

bukit gantang by election mahathir ceramah and luncheon 060409 07This has set off a political squabble in Malaysia, with the 84-year-old former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad (right) using it as a cudgel to once again beat up on Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, the successor he came to revile as premier, for signing the letters of exchange.

Sabah and Sarawak, which would claim the oil, say their state assemblies were never consulted, a violation of parliamentary procedure and constitutionality.

In addition, Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim of the Pakatan Rakyat coalition and his ally Lim Kit Siang, head of the opposition Democratic Action Party, are blasting away at Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak, who was deputy prime minister and essentially running the cabinet in the waning days of Abdullah's reign, which ended only a month after the agreements were signed.

Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, a rebel elder statesman inside Umno, has criticised the agreement. Hassan Marican, the former chief executive officer of Petronas, called it a treasonous activity.

Limbang nearly cuts Brunei in half on Borneo's north coast but it effectively belongs to Sarawak. The signing appeared to close one of South-East Asia's longest-running minor border disputes and was claimed as a diplomatic triumph, settling a sea boundary delineation dispute which had held up oil and gas exploration off the two countries' mutual coasts as well as enabling the two to
form a united front against China's claims over the entire South China Sea.

Even today, the Chinese Foreign Ministry lays claims to Malaysia's Layang-Layang, an atoll roughly 300km from the coast of Sabah and 1,800km from Hainan, China's most southerly inhabited island.

Fast depleting reserves

The disposition of the two blocks is important to both countries. Malaysia is estimated to become a net oil importer by 2011 if it does not find more reserves, and Brunei's fields, which have for decades made it the richest nation on a per capita basis in Southeast Asia, are fast depleting.

A 2006 study by Rabobank, the Dutch financial services provider, said Brunei's wells will run dry in 2015 - just a bit over five years from now. A 2003 study by the World Markets Research
Centre puts the end of the gravy train a year earlier, 2014.

The controversy surfaced when Murphy Oil, the Houston, Texas-based exploration company working with Petronas Carigali, Petronas's exploration and production unit, issued a press release on April 21 saying that it had been informed by Petronas that "following the execution of the Exchange of Letters between Malaysia and the Sultanate of Brunei on March 16, 2009, the offshore exploration areas designated as Block L and Block M are no longer a part of Malaysia" and that Murphy was terminating its production sharing contracts.

"We have absolutely no comment beyond what was in our news release," said Mindy West, Murphy's vice-president for public relations, in an email.

The Murphy Oil announcement set off Mahathir, who charged on April 29 in his popular blog Che Det, which is read widely in Malaysia, that "Abdullah has caused Malaysia to lose at least US$100 billion(about RM327 billion) of Malaysia's oil in this agreement. Can Wisma
Putra please explain why it did not stop Abdullah?"

abdullah ahmad badawi pak lah parliament pc 101208 02Mahathir is still smarting from a book written by former Asian Wall Street Journal editor Barry Wain, which accused the former premier of wasting as much as US$40 billion at exchange rates at the time on grandiose projects and corruption. Today, every chance he gets, he brings up the amount of money Abdullah (left) allegedly wasted or lost to corruption.

"Having given up on Block L and M so easily, especially to a small country like Brunei, we will have no chance with Indonesia in the contest over the Ambalat oilfields," said an aide to Anwar.

Last May, warships from Indonesia and Malaysia challenged each other repeatedly in the disputed oil-rich Ambalat territories of the Celebes Sea, east of Borneo, with Indonesian navy officials saying they were minutes away from firing on the Malaysians, which they charged were 12 nautical miles inside Indonesian territory. Both countries have awarded oil concessions to Shell, Unocal, and ENI respectively in the disputed region.

Political storm in KL

But it appears that the storm in Kuala Lumpur is political rather than international, and probably confined to the local political arena. The government insists that under the agreement signed by Abdullah a year ago, national oil company Petronas will engage in joint exploration and exploitation of the two blocks with Brunei.

In fact it appears unclear if the two blocks were ever Malaysia's to give away. The agreement appears to settle a deadlock over the two blocks that has existed since at least 2003, when Malaysia awarded the them to Petronas Carigali and Murphy Oil in an effort to assert
its claim over the area. That was immediately met with a Bruneian gunboat, which drove Murphy's craft out of the area.

A month later, the Malaysian Navy blocked the arrival of a ship owned by Total, one of six companies to which Brunei had awarded a competing concession. The dispute in fact kept all of the companies from drilling for anything.

The two competing oil exploration companies seem to believe cooperation will go forward. Nobody seems to have read the last sentence in the Murphy Oil statement to the New York Stock Exchange, which said that "Murphy's potential participation in replacement production sharing contracts covering these areas is under discussion."

In addition, in a statement on its own website, Total, the French oil operator in league with the Brunei government to operate in Blocks L and M, said that the company "also remains optimistic pending the result of oil sharing negotiations between Brunei and Malaysia to resolve a dispute over the ownership of two large oil exploration blocks in the deepwater exploration areas in the South China Sea".

This optimistic message was presented in a telephone conversation by Yves Grosjean, the newly assigned general manager for the two Total affiliates in Brunei.

Both countries might want to make sure their respective environmental agencies are capable of monitoring the undersea drilling to make sure there isn't a blowout like the one in the Gulf of Mexico, in which a deep sea well controlled by BP is spewing thousands of barrels of oil er day into the waters in what could end up as one of the biggest manmade environmental disasters of all time.


This article first appeared in Asia Sentinel.

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