UN-Australia Deal Is Near
on Timor Oil and Gas

http://www.globalpolicy.org/security/issues/etimor/2001/0521aust.htm

By Michael Richardson

International Herald Tribune
May 21, 2001

Australia and the United Nations temporary administration in
East Timor are reportedly near an agreement on new revenue-sharing
rules covering the rich oil and gas fields between northern Australia
and the former Indonesian territory. If the deal can be finalized
in the next few weeks, as Australian officials hope, it will
clear the way for supplying liquefied natural gas from the area
to the U.S. West Coast. 

While Indonesia ruled East Timor from 1975 to 1999, Canberra
negotiated a treaty with Jakarta governing a 75,000-square-kilometer
(30,000-square-mile) area in the Timor Sea. The zone was jointly
managed by the two countries, and production royalties from oil
and gas fields were divided equally. 

Eight months ago, after East Timor's break from Indonesia, negotiations
on a new treaty began between Australia and the UN-led administration,
which is preparing the former territory for independence. The
next round of talks is scheduled to take place this week in Dili,
the capital of East Timor. The negotiations have proved tougher
and slower than expected; a UN official on the East Timor side
said last month that the zone was closed for business unless
Australia agreed to new boundaries in the Timor Sea that gave
East Timor much more resources. 

The UN official, East Timor's interim minister for political
affairs, Peter Galbraith, said the difference between the East
Timorese and Australian positions amounted to a large revenue
loss to East Timor. Depending on the outcome of the talks, the
United Nations expects oil and gas production in the Timor Sea
to generate annual revenue of $100 million to $500 million for
East Timor. There are several oil fields under production in
the zone, and in February the liquefied natural gas project moved
a step closer to reality when Phillips Petroleum Co. of the United
States, Royal Dutch/Shell Group and Woodside Petroleum Ltd. of
Australia agreed to work together to jointly develop their separate
gas fields in the Timor Sea. 

This arrangement will ensure sufficient gas reserves for Phillips
to go ahead with construction of a plant near Darwin, in northern
Australia, to produce 4.8 million metric tons a year of liquefied
natural gas for export. But the company has a July deadline for
approving construction of a 500-kilometer (300-mile) pipeline
to Darwin from its Bayu-Undan field in the Timor Sea zone. Phillips
must also finalize key supply contracts in the next three months,
including a deal worth up to 7 billion Australian dollars ($3.68
billion) to supply liquefied natural gas to El Paso Corp. El
Paso has signed a letter of intent to buy the gas over 15 years
starting 2005, mainly for use in California, which is facing
serious energy shortages. 

"The entire set of gas export contracts could be jeopardized
if the treaty is not agreed in time," said Jim Godlove, the Darwin
area manager for Phillips Petroleum Co., which is part of a consortium
developing gas fields in the Timor Sea. 

Australia's foreign minister, Alexander Downer, said recent talks
with East Timorese and UN officials had made considerable progress
after an "extremely difficult" phase in the negotiations. After
initially proposing to split revenue on a 60-40 basis, Australia
is reported to be offering East Timor an 85 percent share, much
closer to the East Timorese request for 90 percent. East Timor
is said to have withdrawn its demand for a redrawing of the sea-bed
boundaries. Mr. Downer said it should now be possible to conclude
a framework agreement for a new Timor Sea zone treaty in the
next couple of months. 



More Information on East Timor
More Information on the Dark Side of Natural Resources








If you appreciate the information we provide, please support
our work.

Make a donation or become a member of Global Policy Forum.

Reply via email to