PetroVietnam employees are pictured at the control room of
an oil rig in the East Vietnam Sea.Tuoi Tre
Many Vietnamese oil and gas enterprises on Friday bemoaned the
challenges facing their business and called for support as oil prices show no
sign of recovery.
The meeting to recap operations in 2014 of
the state-run oil and gas behemoth PetroVietnam (PVN) in
The PetroVietnam Exploration Production Corporation,
a PVN subsidiary, has plans to cut contracts with its suppliers and ask them
to reduce prices in signed contracts to deal with the situation, according to
chairman Hoang Ngoc Dang.
“Oil prices keep falling and we need help to
maintain our existence,” he lamented.
Dang admitted that PVEP is “no longer a
financial giant as it was in the last few years.”
Nguyen Hoai Giang, chairman of the Binh Son
Refining and Petrochemical Co. Ltd., which operates
Dung Quat Refinery, located in the central
In November 2014, the company reported a
VND237 billion (US$11.04 million) loss as oil fell to $85 a barrel, and the
loss the following month was estimated at VND476 billion ($21.76 million),
Son elaborated.
PVN general director Nguyen Quoc Khanh
admitted that the company was still able to sell its oil at an average of
$103 a barrel in 2014, as prices only began shrinking in the later half of
the year.
But the falling oil prices from October have
affected PVN operations and reduced its revenue, which Khanh said will also
affect the company’s plan for 2015.
In 2014 PVN contributed VND178 trillion
($8.3 trillion) to the state budget, but the figure will drop to VND93.1
trillion if oil dips to $60 a barrel this year, Khanh noted.
“And our state budget contribution in 2015
will be only VND79.8 trillion, way below the 2014 figure, if oil falls
further to $40 a barrel,” he said.
PVN chairman Nguyen Xuan Son thus ordered
that the oil and gas sector try to save costs in 2015 to deal with the oil
price crash.
“Businesses should also consider whether to
continue exploring oil fields that have high production costs and only begin
exploration when oil prices recover,” he said.
Speaking at the meeting, Deputy Prime
Minister Hoang Trung Hai ordered that PVN take immediate measures to cope
with the situation as oil prices are expected to remain low for the next two
years.
The slumping oil prices are a huge
challenge, but the country’s oil exploration cannot be reduced or slowed
down, he said.
“PVN must have a solution to ensure the
national energy security,” he urged.
TUOI TRE
NEWS
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Thứ Sáu, 16 tháng 1, 2015
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