InterOil's latest talks with the government of Papua
New Guinea have begun to break down and it is looking more and more likely that
the deal will fall through altogether.
Minister for
Petroleum and Energy William Duma has set a 180-day trigger for termination of
their 2009 project agreement, in which InterOil is set to deliver between 7.6
million-10.2 million metric tonness of liquid natural gas per year from its Elk
and Antelope gas reserves.
In 2009, the government and InterOil reached this
agreement, and the company promised to use state-of-the-art technology and
internationally-recognised operators with experience in similar-sized assets.
However, progress has been very slow, with the
company only proposing a phased development of the reserves and no yet naming
an operator.
ExxonMobil has been constructing a $15.7 billion
physical and liquid natural gas plant, as part of PNG’s foundation project.
Duma said that the government had worked with
InterOil to ensure that the Elk/Antelope assets were monetised in a manner
consistent with these high standards.
"InterOil has for too long insisted on a
development structure, which is designed to only meet its objectives of controlling
the asset and the pace of developing it.
“This has led to a proposal calling for a piecemeal,
incremental and fractured development implementation operated by InterOil and
its affiliates, rather than by large-scale international operators with experience
and capital."
Minister Duma further called for InterOil to sell it
at a minimum 50.5% stake in the Elk/Antelope reserves to a major company with
experience operating a plant of this size.
He added that the upstream activities, which
InterOil wanted to control under its plans, must be operated by the
international company, not by InterOil or its affiliates.
The company's affiliate in the region, Liquid
Niugini, recently wrote a letter to the Department of Petroleum and Energy,
which claimed that the government's notice of intent to terminate the project
agreement was invalid.
The company
claimed that, for the state to terminate the agreement, the state must prove
that the company had failed to take certain steps, whereas it was currently
just upset with intentions to take future actions.
Earlier this week, InterOil claimed to be in talks
with Chevron to fulfill this operator role, although Chevron had yet to make a
formal statement on the matter.
Duma and the
government has consistently hinted that they would like Shell to be the
international operator.
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