With demand for gas likely to soar in the coming years in line with
rapid industrial and energy-use expansion, the government has poured
most of its resources this year into developing several key upstream and
downstream gas projects.
The
strategy is part of the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry's 2013
strategic plan in which projects related to gas will dominate the
country's energy sector until 2018.
According to a copy of the
strategic plan, received by The Jakarta Post recently, the ministry will
prioritize three gas projects this year, developed separately by
France-based Total E&P Indonesie, ConocoPhillips Indonesia and
Australia-based Pearl Oil.
Total's project will involve the
enhanced development of the South Mahakam field in East Kalimantan,
expected to generate 202 million standard cubic feet per day (mmscfd).
The gas will be delivered to the nearby Bontang liquefied natural gas
(LNG) plant.
The government's interim upstream oil and gas
regulator (SKMigas) will soon open the bidding process for the buyer of
the gas from Bontang.
Another key development is by Pearl Oil,
which is expected to pump 50 mmscfd of gas from its Ruby field in Sebuku
Island in East Kalimantan. This gas will be supplied to a fertilizer
plant run by state-owned PT Pupuk Kalimantan Timur (PKT) in East
Kalimantan.
Conoco is slated to contribute 40 million mmscfd from
the Sumpal field in South Sumatra. Output from the field will be
delivered to Gas Supply Pte Ltd. (GSPL) Singapore as part of the firm's
supply contract.
"We're expecting these new projects to be ready
this year, and will soon contribute to higher production," said SKMigas
spokesman Hadi Prasetyo on Monday.
Gas supply for the domestic
market is estimated to grow by 9 percent this year to 4,020 billion
British thermal units per day (BBTUD) from 3,615 billion BBTUD,
according to the ministry.
The ministry has also revealed that in
the past eight years, domestic supply of gas has soared by 250 percent,
mostly due to demand from power plants, manufacturing industry and
fertilizers plants.
The exponential growth in demand for gas from
the domestic market has pushed the government to secure national
interest by rebalancing exports and domestic sales. Indonesia is the
world's third largest gas exporter after Qatar and Malaysia.
Gas
exports this year are slated to decline by as much as 3,870 BBTUD. For
the first time, allocation for exports will be smaller than for domestic
use.
But as the single largest holder of proven natural gas
reserves in the Asia Pacific region, Indonesia's gas plays an important
role for the Japanese, Chinese and Korean energy supply.
With
reserves of 112 trillion cubic feet (TCF), Indonesia has expanded its
gas pipeline network to neighboring countries such as Singapore and
Malaysia.
As the 14th largest holder of proven natural gas
reserves in the world, Indonesia is now struggling to expand the
capacity of its downstream sector to help supply sufficient gas to the
domestic market
According to the ministry's strategic planning, the government has
relied on several projects already under construction for next year's
operations.
The network will link the gas pipeline network from the western part of Sumatra to the eastern part of Java.
Among
the projects is the revitalization of the Arun LNG plant in Aceh, which
is scheduled for completion in the fourth quarter of next year and the
construction of a pipeline that will link Arun to Belawan Port, which
will be completed in the fourth quarter of next year.
All of the projects are managed by state oil and gas company PT Pertamina.
State
gas-utility company PT Perusahaan Gas Negara (PGN) will focus this year
on completing the floating storage regasification unit (FSRU) in
Lampung, which is scheduled for completion in 2014.
The FSRU is currently under construction by Norway-based Hoegh, an LNG transportation and services company.
The
Pertamina and PGN joint venture, PT Nusantara Regas, is slated to
complete its FSRU in West Java this year. The unit will need 26 LNG
cargoes or around 22 million tons in 2013.
Pertamina's unit PT
Pertagas is also in the construction process of pipelines that will link
industrial areas of Cirebon and Bekasi in West Java. The project is set
for completion in 2014. The company is also constructing a pipeline
that will link Gresik in East Java with Central Java's capital Semarang.
PT
Rekayasa Industri is also in the pipeline business with Pertamina,
constructing a pipeline that will link Cirebon and Semarang.
Other
key projects include the construction of an FSRU in Central Java by
Pertamina, which is set for completion in 2014, and the construction of a
pipeline from the Kepodang gas field to the Tambaklorok power plant in
Central Java, scheduled for completion in 2014.
Energy sector
think tank ReforMiner Institute's deputy director Komaidi Notonegoro
said that given the country's declining oil output, the government
should aggressively focus on gas development, which is expected to
supersede oil in the near future.
Indonesia is currently a net
importer of both crude oil and refined products. Crude oil production
has been declining since 1998 due to the maturation of the country's
largest oil fields and the failure to develop new, comparable resources.
"The
government is already on the right track by concentrating on the gas
projects rather than oil. The most important thing is their consistency
in implementing the plans," said Komaidi.
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