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ENERGY NEWS INDONESIA: ENERGY HIGHLIGHTS MARCH 2006 |
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SUMMARY :
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Note: This report uses an exchange rate of 1 USD = Rp 9,075
BPH Migas Awards
Pipeline Rights
On
March 1, downstream regulatory body BPH MIGAS announced that state oil
and gas company Pertamina and local firm PT Rekayasa Industri had won
the rights to build and operate an East Java to West Java gas
pipeline. The companies
won the rights to build and operate the pipeline for 25 years and
reportedly will spend USD 350 million on construction.
Pertamina will build the 250-kilometer (km) Gresik to Semarang
segment, while Rekayasa will build the 230-km Semarang to Cirebon
segment. Gas flows from East Java are slated to start in 2009.
Pertamina and Rekayasa plan to charge pipeline tariffs of USD 36 and
25 cents per million British Thermal Unit (mmbtu) respectively,
significantly cheaper than the Grissik-Duri (Sumatra) pipeline tariff
of USD 62 cents per mmbtu. Other
companies participating in the tender were state gas company PGN,
Indonesian pipe manufacturer Bakrie Pipe Industries, and local
engineering firm PT Moeladi.
Shell Opens Fuel
Retail Outlets in Jakarta
Royal
Dutch Shell opened its second and third retail fuel stations in
Jakarta in March 2006. Shell
entered the Indonesian fuel retail market as Indonesia's first private
fuel retailer in November 2005. It
markets high-octane gasoline and diesel comparable to Pertamina's
Pertamax and DEX diesel fuel, and has stated it is considering
entering the subsidized fuel market.
However, in order to obtain approval from BPH Migas to market
subsidized fuel, Shell would need to establish at least 20 retail
outlets in three or more of Indonesia's fuel distribution regions.
BPH Migas appoints sellers of subsidized fuel through direct
appointment or tender, and plans to tender a public service obligation
(PSO) to distribute subsidized fuel in mid 2006.
Pertamina and
ExxonMobil Sign Cepu JOA
On
March 15, Pertamina and ExxonMobil signed a Joint Operating Agreement
(JOA) for the Cepu block located in East and Central Java, ending more
than four years of negotiations.
Under the agreement, the two companies agreed to form a joint
operating committee, with ExxonMobil subsidiary Mobil Cepu Limited
serving as sole operator. In
September 2005, Pertamina and ExxonMobil signed an agreement with
upstream regulator BP Migas converting ExxonMobil's Technical
Assistance Contract (TAC) with Pertamina into a joint Production
Sharing Contract (PSC), and extending the PSC for 30 years to year
2035. ExxonMobil and
Pertamina each hold 45 percent interest in the Cepu block, with the
remaining 10 percent held by the governments of East Java, Central
Java, Blora Regency, and Bojonegoro Regency.
The Cepu block is estimated to contain reserves of 1.7 trillion
cubic feet of gas and 600 million barrels of oil, and represents
Indonesia's largest oil discovery in three decades. First production
is slated for 2008 with initial capacity of 25,000 to 40,000 barrels
per day increasing to 170,000 barrels per day at peak production. GOI
officials have stated that production from Cepu will play an important
role in Indonesia's efforts to stem declining oil production.
Bumi Resources
Divests Coal Units
Indonesia's
largest coal exporter PT Bumi Resources announced on March 16 that the
company had signed an agreement to sell its coalmines to the
little-known Indonesian firm PT Borneo Lumbung Energi.
Borneo is reportedly affiliated with the privately held
Indonesian securities firm Renaissance Capital, and reportedly agreed
to
pay USD 3.2 billion for a 95 percent stake in Kaltim Prima Coal (KPC)
and 100 percent stakes in Arutmin and Indocoal Resources. KPC and Arutmin are Indonesia's second and fourth largest
coal mines, producing 27.6 and 16.8 million tons of coal respectively
in 2005. The Jakarta
Stock Exchange (JSX) suspended trading of shares in Bumi Resources for
three working days following the company's unanticipated sale
announcement. Bumi
Resources announced that it plans to enter the alternative energy
business after closing the transaction in June 2006, possibly
including coal liquefaction, upgrading brown coal, and biofuel. In addition, Bumi Resources also disclosed it planned to
merge with Energi Mega Persada (EMP), Indonesia's second largest local
oil and gas producer, in July 2006. Both Bumi Resources and EMP are
affiliated with the family of Coordinating Minister for Peoples'
Welfare Aburizal Bakrie.
PLN Tenders Six
IPP Projects
On
March 29, state electricity company PLN announced the tender of five
coal-fired and one combined cycle Independent Power Projects (IPP) in
Java, Kalimantan and Sulawesi. In
the tender documents, PLN banned companies participating in the 600
megawatt (MT) Cirebon power plant from entering bids on the 500 MW
Pasuran project. PLN
estimated that the projects would require an estimated investment of
up to USD 2.3 billion dollars, and would increase national grid
capacity by 2,200 megawatts (MW) starting in year 2010. However,
analysts believe that PLN will face serious challenges meeting growing
electricity demand in the future because of a lack of projects in the
pipeline and a lengthy project implementation process.
Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources Purnomo Yusgiantoro
has estimated that in order to keep up with a nine percent average
growth in power demand, Indonesia will need over 30,000 MW of new
generation capacity in the next 10 years, including 21,000 MW in Java
alone.
Table 1: IPP Projects Tendered
|
No |
Project
Name |
Capacity
(MW) |
Location |
Est.
Completion |
|
1 |
Central
Java Coal Fired Steam |
1,200 |
Northern
Central Java |
2011 |
|
2 |
Pasuruan
Combined Cycle |
500 |
East
Java |
2010 |
|
3 |
East
Kalimantan Coal Fired Steam |
50
|
Eastern
East Kalimantan |
2010 |
|
4 |
North
Sulawesi Coal Fired Steam |
50 |
Easterh
North Sulawesi |
2010 |
|
5 |
North
Sumatra Coal Fired Steam |
200 |
Eastern
North Sumatra |
2010 |
|
6 |
Bali
Coal Fired Steam |
200 |
Northern
Bali |
2010 |
Government
Withdraws Electricity Tariff Hike Plan
On
March 21, President Yudhoyono announced that the GOI would not
increase electricity tariffs in 2006 as anticipated by the 2006
budget. The GOI's plans
to raise
electricity
tariffs had encountered strong resistance from Parliament and the
business community since its announcement shortly after the October
2005 fuel subsidy cuts. PLN
generates an estimated 40 percent of its power through diesel-fired
plants, and accordingly faces sharply higher costs in the wake of the
October 2005 fuel price hikes. In
order to cover increased generating costs, PLN requested an increase
in its Rp 15 trillion (USD 1.9 billion) 2006 subsidy and permission to
increase tariffs up to 50 percent. However, a March 2006 audit by the
Supreme Audit Board calculated PLN's deficit as closer to Rp 27.2
trillion (USD 3 billion).
In
2006, PLN hopes to reduce diesel consumption by brining online three
coal-fired or combined cycle power plants, Cilacap, Tanjung Jati B and
Cilegon. However thin
reserve margins on the Java Bali grid combined with uncertainty over
gas supply may limit PLN's capacity to take diesel-fired plants
offline. PLN also plans
to minimize transmission losses, improve customer collections, and
reduce production cost and electricity theft to cut its operating
deficit.
Gas Supply
Agreements Signed
On
March 7, state gas company PGN signed a MOU with Asia Petroleum
Development Asahan (APDA), a subsidiary of Canada's Serica Energy, for
the purchase of gas from the Asahan field offshore North Sumatra.
APDA will supply 20
million
cubic feet per day (mmcfd) of gas for four years beginning in 2008.
PGN stated the additional supply will help PGN meet industrial
demand in North Sumatra and boost the company's revenue by USD 40
million per year. Other significant gas supply agreements signed
during March 2006 include:
-
The Indonesian energy company Medco Energi signed a Heads of
Agreement (HOA) under which it will supply 10 mmcfd of gas to the
South Sumatra gas supplier Mitra Energi Buana.
-
Medco signed a gas supply MOU with the South Sumatra provincial
government-owned company Petromuba for a small power plant in South
Sumatra. Terms of the MOU
were not announced.
-
French energy giant Total signed a HOA to supply 2.3 mmcfd gas
to PLN's Bontang, East Kalimantan power plant.
-
Total signed a MOU to supply PLN's Balikpapan power plant in
East Kalimantan. Terms of
the MOU were not announced.
Table 2: Gas Agreement Signing
|
Suppliers |
Buyers |
Contract
Type |
Start
Year |
Contract
Years |
Volume
(TBTU) |
|
Medco
E&P |
Mitra
Energi Buana |
HOA |
2007 |
10 |
8.25 |
|
Total
E&P |
PLN
Bontang |
HOA |
2008 |
6.5 |
6.8 |
|
Medco
E&P |
Petromuba |
MOU |
2007 |
n.a |
n.a |
|
Total
E&P |
PLN
Balikpapan |
MOU |
n.a |
n.a |
n.a |
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