Affichage des articles dont le libellé est “Red Emperor” block. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est “Red Emperor” block. Afficher tous les articles

vendredi 27 avril 2018

China’s Intimidation Exposes Vietnam’s Lack of Deterrence

Hanoi does not seem to have a strategy to develop the resources that international law says rightfully belong to it. And the economic costs of this predicament are rising.
By Bill Hayton

A Chinese coast guard vessel sails near an oil drilling rig in disputed waters in the South China Sea in 2014. 

Vietnam has lost another sea battle: a $200 million oil and gas development project — known as the ‘Red Emperor’ development — off Vietnam’s southeast coast has been suspended, possibly cancelled. 
Hanoi’s hopes of a hydrocarbon boost to its stretched government budget have been dashed. 
And the culprit is Vietnam’s ‘good neighbour, good comrade and good friend’ to the north.
The project, many years in the making, was a joint venture between Repsol of Spain, Mubadala of Abu Dhabi and the state-owned energy company PetroVietnam. 
Commercial drilling was due to begin this April and oil and gas were expected to flow for at least 10 years. 
A specialised platform built in the port of Vung Tau lies idle, as do the contracted drilling rig and storage tanker.
So far, the Vietnamese government has not admitted that the project has been suspended. 
Nor has it confirmed that another Repsol project on a neighbouring block of seabed was cancelled last year.
Both the Repsol blocks lie within Vietnam’s claimed exclusive economic zone. 
A reasonable interpretation of international law would give it the right to the resources in the blocks. Unfortunately for Vietnam, China does not subscribe to that reasonable view.
Over the past decade, China has increased the degree of intimidation that it is prepared to use to achieve its strategic objectives. 
In 2007, Beijing threatened international energy companies, suggesting that their businesses in China were at risk if they pursued offshore ventures with Vietnam. BP and Chevron were among the companies that folded. 
In 2011 and 2012, Chinese ships used force against Vietnamese oil survey vessels, cutting and snagging their seismic cables. 
In 2017, China threatened to attack Vietnamese positions on the Vanguard Bank in the South China Sea if Repsol’s development was not halted.
It is not yet clear what kind of threat was issued in the latest confrontation. 
But the Vietnamese decision did coincide with China’s deployment of a 40-ship naval flotilla off Hainan, just two days sailing from the drill location. 
This is the situation that Vietnamese leadership finds itself in: a huge neighbour is prepared to imply the use of military force to threaten Vietnam’s vital economic interests.
Vietnam is facing significant economic woes. 
Its public debt is the highest of the ASEAN countries (excluding Singapore). 
Debt has risen rapidly from 50 per cent of GDP in 2011 to 64 per cent in 2016 and is now thought to be bumping the legal ceiling of 65 per cent. 
To try to avoid breaching that limit, sales of stakes in state-owned companies have risen sharply and ministers have pledged to cut the state payroll, including for the police. 
Austerity is being imposed on the traditional tools of Communist Party control.
In addition, taxes are going up. 
The government has introduced a new levy on fuel, ostensibly to cut carbon emissions, but really to try to balance the books. 
Tax increases are never popular but as existing oil fields become exhausted the government urgently needs to replace declining revenue sources. 
The Red Emperor field was planned to be productive within months but the suspension now creates a hole in next year’s state budget. 
Ironically, China’s moves out at sea have made its communist comrade more vulnerable on land.
What options does Hanoi have? 
For some years it has been trying to build up its naval deterrent capabilities with new ships, submarines and missiles. 
Vietnam could probably sink a few Chinese ships if it came to a fight, but the consequences for it — both military and economic — would be dire. 
By backing down over this oil drill Vietnam has demonstrated its lack of a credible naval deterrent. 
Not even the visit of one of the mightiest warships on earth, the USS Carl Vinson, to Da Nang days before the scheduled start of Repsol’s oil drilling was sufficient to give Vietnam the confidence to ignore Chinese threats.
Another option is diplomacy. 
In the days after the Repsol decision, the Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi visited Hanoi. 
Talks were friendly but there was a sharp disconnect in the official statements. 
The Chinese talked of ‘exploring feasible ways for joint development’ whereas the Vietnamese suggested that ‘the issues must be tackled in respect of … the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea’.
Diplomacy with third countries is tricky for Vietnam given its long-standing aversion to alliances and the Communist Party’s distrust of the United States. 
Vietnam’s current leadership team under General-Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong are ‘system-loyalists’ determined to maintain Communist Party leadership. 
They see their Chinese counterparts as more reliable than the democracy-loving Americans. 
The hardliners are currently engaged in a severe crackdown on political dissidents, reasoning that Washington is unlikely to sanction them given the current geopolitical climate. 
For the same reasons, Beijing can be reasonably sure that Hanoi is not about to jump into the US camp simply because of the loss of oil revenue from the South China Sea.
Hanoi’s options are very limited. 
It, along with all the other Southeast Asian claimant states in the South China Sea, is still refusing to concede on the main Chinese demand for ‘joint development’. 
It continues to court international support and to engage China in discussions. 
But it does not seem to have a strategy to develop the resources that international law says rightfully belong to it. 
And the economic costs of this predicament are rising.

vendredi 23 mars 2018

Vietnam halts South China Sea oil drilling project under pressure from Beijing


By James Pearson, Henning Gloystei

HANOI/SINGAPORE - Vietnam has halted an oil drilling project in the “Red Emperor” block off its southeastern coast licensed to Spanish energy firm Repsol following pressure from China, three sources with direct knowledge of the situation told Reuters on Friday.
It is the second time in less than a year that Vietnam has had to suspend a major oil development in the busy South China Sea waterway under pressure from China.
A source with direct knowledge of the situation said government ministries in Vietnam had paused the project while the decision-making politburo debates whether to suspend or indefinitely terminate the contract.
The decision, which hangs on whether the fees incurred by contract cancellation will exceed the cost of resisting Chinese pressure, is on hold until the politburo meets, the source said.
That meeting has been delayed by overseas trips by Vietnam’s prime minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, a series of visits by foreign dignitaries to Hanoi, and the death of former prime minister Phan Van Khai on Saturday.
“The ministries are determined to terminate the contract,” said the source, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the situation.
A source with direct knowledge of the situation confirmed that the project, which is a joint venture with state oil company PetroVietnam, had been stopped following pressure from China.
A source at Repsol told Reuters high-level executives had been discussing how to respond to the pressure, which had been applied both directly by China, and indirectly via Vietnam.
A spokesman for Repsol in Madrid declined to comment. 
PetroVietnam executives declined to comment. 
The Vietnamese foreign ministry did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.
Asked at a regular briefing if China had pressed either Vietnam or Repsol, Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said she did not know where such news had come from, but did not elaborate.
“We hope the relevant sides can work together to maintain the hard-earned positive situation in the South China Sea,” she said.

‘RED EMPEROR’
Red Emperor, known in Vietnamese as the Ca Rong Do field, is part of Block 07/03 in the Nam Con Son basin, 440 km (273 miles) off the coast of Vietnam’s southern city of Vung Tau.
The $1-billion field of moderate size by international standards is seen as a key asset to help slow the decline of Vietnam’s stalling oil and gas production.
But the block lies near the U-shaped “nine-dash line” that marks the vast area that China claims in the sea and overlaps what it says are its own oil concessions.
Located in waters around 350 metres (1,148 ft) deep, it is considered to be profitable from around $60 per barrel. 
Current Brent crude oil prices are almost $70 per barrel.
The field’s estimated potential recovery is around 45 million barrels of crude oil, 172 billion cubic feet of natural gas and 2.3 million barrels of condensate, a super light form of crude oil that is mostly a byproduct of gas production.
Global crude oil, by comparison, is at almost 100 million barrels per day. 
Global gas consumption is around 4 trillion cubic metres per year.
The move came as Repsol was making final preparations for commercial drilling, according to the BBC, which first reported the news on Friday.
A rig, the Ensco 8504, was due to depart from Singapore for the drill site on Thursday, the BBC said, citing an unnamed energy industry source.
Repsol spent around 33 million euros ($41 million) on exploration in Vietnam last year, according to the company’s 2017 profit and loss statement.
Repsol’s top management considers the Red Emperor site one of the company’s future growth projects.
Repsol, which has a 51.75 percent stake in the project, signed a 384-million-euro rental contract for a rig to start work on a Vietnamese site in 2019, according to the statement.
Just under half the company’s 1 billion euro ($1.23 billion) investments for which contracts have been signed for 2018 are in Vietnam.