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With the government's deadline for U.S. energy giant
ExxonMobil Corp. and state oil and gas firm Pertamina to agree on the
operatorship of the Cepu block having expired Tuesday, the relevant
ministers are now set to hold a meeting to decide on the matter.
Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro and State
Minister for State Enterprises Sugiharto have arranged a Wednesday
meeting to review progress in the negotiations between the two sides.
The government does not have a ready-made solution at hand, Sugiharto
admitted early Tuesday after a hearing with the House of
Representatives' state enterprises commission and energy commission.
"We still want joint operatorship," said Sugiharto. "We need to study
the latest developments in the negotiations (before deciding)," he
added.
He declined to specify a timeframe within which the government would
decide on which of the two sides would be appointed the day-to-day
operator of Cepu, which is expected to produce 170,000 barrels per day
at peak production, or 18 percent of the country's current production.
ExxonMobil spokesman Maman Budiman said that although the government
might take charge of the operatorship issue, his company would continue
its negotiations with Pertamina.
"We are still talking and we will continue to talk," said Maman.
Pertamina refused to comment on the expiry of the deadline, only saying
that neither side had budged from its position.
"I don't want to make any other statement," said Pertamina vice
president Mustiko Saleh. "Everybody knows the situation. The problem
here is clear."
Pertamina is insisting of having control of Cepu for the first five
years of the US$2.6 billion project, saying that it would be able to
keep costs lower than ExxonMobil.
Pertamina has also tried to make capital out of its position as a state
company and the former owner of the block, which is located on the
border between Central Java and West Java.
ExxonMobil, on the other hand, says that it has drawn up a detailed
plan for the development of the block. The world's largest publicly
traded oil company also says that it has strong financial backing, the
necessary technology, and better access to the required goods and
services to ensure speedy production.
Vice President Jusuf Kalla said on Feb. 18 that Pertamina and
ExxonMobil would have until the end of the month to reach an amicable
settlement before the government would step in.
Indonesia has high hopes that the output of Cepu will lift its
declining oil production and thus help the government balance the books.
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