New law hands Pertamina power as Indonesia dodge energy crisis
Indonesia needs investors to avert an energy crisis. But a proposed law, widely hoped to improve the fiscal and regulatory environment, appears disappointing
The new law being reviewed by Indonesia’s policy makers will unequivocally give state Pertamina significant privileges and establish a national operator to buy oil and gas, a draft proposal shows. The moves show a greater desire for energy security, although analysts doubt if the law in its present guise will achieve that. They also reflect the government’s ambition to manage pricing. This nationalist spirit in the proposed law is obviously worrying for foreign investors who have spent considerable sums investing in the sector, said Charles Ball, an energy specialist at law firm Reed Smith. It is no surprise that investment has stagnated in recent years – direct investment stood at $19.4bn i
Also in this section
15 November 2024
With Chevron and AIM-listed Challenger Energy having completed their Uruguayan farm-out deal, Challenger CEO Eytan Uliel updates Petroleum Economist on the firm's progress in the frontier basin
14 November 2024
The country is seeking to secure its position as a major global refiner and meet rising domestic requirements
13 November 2024
IOCs are focused on the next wave of exploration activity in Namibia and are keen to learn from one another’s results