Declining investment limits Vietnam’s oil and gas industry

By Anh Minh   July 19, 2019 | 11:32 pm PT
Declining investment limits Vietnam’s oil and gas industry
An oil drilling platform in Vung Tau, southern Vietnam. Photo by Shutterstock/TommyTeo.
Declining investment, dwindling reserves, high taxes and red tape are combining to limit Vietnam’s oil and gas industry.

The industry used to receive around $2 billion from foreign investors each year, but this has come down to now only a few hundred million dollars, Tran Sy Thanh, chairman of state oil giant PetroVietnam (PVN), said at a meeting this week.

Contributions to Vietnam’s oil reserves have also been decreasing. "When our predecessors extracted one ton of crude oil (to use), they put another 1.5 or 2 times as much into reserves. Now we take out 1 ton of crude oil, we only add another 0.3-0.4 percent into reserves," he added.

Regulations make it costly to explore for new sources of oil. For instance, Vietnam’s Law on Water Resources requires each exploration lot to pay $10-15 million in taxes, which is too high given that investment is so limited, Thanh said. "It makes things for us (oil prospectors) very difficult, it’s like we are tying ourselves down."

Without funds for drilling and exploration, there is no way to increase reserves. Despite changing conditions, the National Assembly has maintained its targets for the oil and gas industry, but has not provided any legal or systemic solutions the sector needs, Thanh said. 

Dr. Nguyen Hong Minh, director of the Vietnam Petroleum Institute, said that Vietnam’s oil and gas industry has a lot of assets, but lacks the operating capital as a result of restrictive regulations and red tape.

Truong Dinh Tuyen, former Minister of Trade, said that the key to resolving bottlenecks in the industry is to amend the Law on Oil to create incentives for PVN.

"Energy security is one of the three pillars of economic security, strongly impacting food security and financial security. The oil law needs to be revised, and incentives offered in a high-risk industry for foreign investors, and thereby restructuring and raising the capacity of the industry," he said.

Vietnam's energy demand increases by an average of 10 percent a year.  Oil and gas contributes 40 percent of the total primary energy supply, and about 35 percent of the total final energy consumption.

 
 
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