Pertamina pushes Iran for exploration of oil fields
(last modified Sat, 19 Aug 2017 16:45:17 GMT )
Aug 19, 2017 16:45 UTC
  • Pertamina pushes Iran for exploration of oil fields

Indonesia’s state-owned oil and gas company Pertamina says it has asked Iran to allow the company to accelerate exploration of two major oil fields in the southwestern Khuzestan province.

Pertamina signed an MoU with the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) last August to conduct joint studies on Mansouri and Ab Teymour fields which contain an estimated total reserve of more than 5 billion barrels.

The company’s CEO Elia Massa Manikis says the two oil fields can produce 250,000 barrels per day, depending on the results of the exploration.

Pertamina is looking for an Iranian partner, he said, adding the Indonesian company will focus on one oil field first and the second one will be developed later after the exploration of the first field is complete.

“Negotiation process is ongoing. We will have to partner with a local company in Iran. We are open to partnership,” the Indonesian weekly magazine Tempo quoted him as saying.

Massa said he is confident Pertamina can boost recovery from the fields. “We have asked through the Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Darmin Nasution to accelerate exploration,” he said further, according to the publication.

Pertamina has an ambitious plan to invest in Iran’s oil and gas projects, citing the country as one of its priorities.  

The company imported its first shipment of liquid petroleum gas from Iran late last year after agreeing to purchase 600,000 tonnes of LPG from NIOC.

NIOC Managing Director Ali Kardor says he expects the contractor for the development of Azadegan to be decided by early next year from a pool of at least 10 bidders.

In an interview with Kyodo News agency, Kardor cited Japan’s Inpex, Total, Royal Dutch Shell, Malaysia’s Petronas, China National Petroleum Corp., Italy’s Eni and BP among the major companies which have expressed a desire to participate in the tender.

Kardor said NIOC will soon provide all necessary data about Azadegan oil field to the interested firms, adding it will take about six months to gather technical and financial proposals from all applicants and evaluate them.

With the Trump administration trying to dissuade international companies from trading with Iran, Tehran wants foreign firms to form consortiums as a hedge against possible sanctions.   

The field had initially been awarded to Inpex but the company quit the project in 2010 due to US sanctions on the Islamic Republic.

The largest Japanese upstream company announced in May that it would consider bidding for Azadegan, saying it was already in the process of collecting information about the field under an MoU signed in 2016.

Kardor said NIOC officials had held meetings with executives from Inpex “many times.”

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