Phillips Petroleum agrees with East Timor on gas pipeline
by The Associated Press
Phillips Petroleum Pty. Ltd. said Dec. 21 it has reached agreement with East Timor on a planned multibillion dollar gas pipeline from the Timor Sea to Australia.
The deal comes five months after Phillips shelved the pipeline when new financial issues were raised in the Timor Gap agreement between Australia and the United Nations Transitional Authority in East Timor.
Phillips and its co-venturers welcomed the East Timor Council of Ministers’ decision to endorse a tax and fiscal package Dec. 21 that will see East Timor receive more than $3.6 billion in royalties over 20 years from the Timor Sea oil and gas fields.
The 310 mile pipeline — which will link Darwin with the Bayu-Undan gas field under the sea between Australia and East Timor — will also underpin 13 billion Australian dollars ($6.5 billion) in investment in Australia.
“This marks a historic day in the establishment of the Timor Sea as an important emerging gas development area,” Phillips president Stephen Brand said in a statement.
“We now await ratification of the agreement by Australia so we can proceed with finalizing gas sales arrangements that will secure project development,” he added.
The field contains an estimated 400 million barrels of condensate and liquefied petroleum gas and 3.4 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.
When the agreement fell through earlier this year, the new East Timor administration had intended to use its taxation powers to claw back generous investment incentives offered under the original treaty between Australia and Indonesia.
Phillips had insisted that business conditions under the new agreement with the newly independent East Timor be no more onerous. Before East Timor became independent, Australia shared Timor Gap revenues 50-50 with Indonesia.
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