Pabrik pupuk ASEAN di Aceh tidak dapat ditutup begitu
saja, dengan terburu-buru.  Soalnya ada prosedur yang
harus ditempuh untuk membentuk atau membubarkan usaha
patungan itu.  Soalnya, menurut keputusan yang
disepakati di Manila tanggal 15 Desember 1987, COIME
(Committee on Industry, Minerals, and Energy) harus
rapat dan sepakat dulu, kalau sudah kesepakatannya
dibawa ke sidang menteri ekonomi ASEAN dibahas dan
belum tentu disepakati.  Jalannya panjang, dan putusan
Kabinet Mega yang sudah "demisioner" ini jelas akan
meninggalkan PR pada pemerintahan SBY.

Tentang pasokan gas yang tidak menentu, itu memang
betul.  Tapi ini kan terkait dengan keamanan, atau
tepatnya ngawurnya pengacau keamanan.  Gerombolan Aceh
itu sungguh ngawur banget, masak pesawat Mobil Oil
yang mau mendarat disana ditembaki, dan ini terjadi
sampai dua kali.  Jelas, Mobil Oil tidak mau ambil
resiko mengorbankan orangnya untuk mati sia-sia.

FYI, sumur minyak atau gas sifatnya agak lucu.  Jangan
harap sumur sementara ditutup, nanti dibuka lagi.  Oh,
tidak.  Setelah dibuka lagi, minyak/gas keluarnya
tersendat-sendat bahkan paling sering, tidak keluar
sama sekali.  Ini menurut cerita orang perminyakan
yang saya kenal.  

Salam,
RM    


(Editorial Jakarta Post)
 Print October 08, 2004 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  
The ASEAN urea plant 

"A mouse dying in a rice barn" is perhaps the most
suitable adage to describe the dire condition of PT
Asean Aceh Fertilizer (AAF), after the decision early
this week by the outgoing administration of President
Megawati Soekarnoputri to close down the 570,000-ton
capacity urea factory due to an acute shortage of
natural gas feedstock.

The Cabinet's decision is not yet a death sentence for
the fertilizer plant, as the government must first
consult all of the AAF shareholders -- the Indonesian
government has a 60 percent share of the company, with
the other founding members of ASEAN (Malaysia,
Singapore, Thailand and the Philippines) holding the
remaining 40 percent. 

The condition of AAF is nevertheless absurd as it is
located near the Arun gas field in Aceh, one of the
world's single largest reservoirs of natural gas, the
main feedstock for making urea fertilizer. ExxonMobil,
the government-appointed operator of the Arun gas
field, has stopped supplying gas to AAF due to
dwindling gas production. 

The government apparently decided to give top priority
to two state-owned urea fertilizer plants (PT Iskandar
Muda I and II) located near AAF, and PT Arun NGL, the
government-controlled producer of LNG for export to
Japan and South Korea. 

The decision might make economic sense, because the
two Iskandar Muda plants are much newer than AAF,
which is already more than 23 years old. More
importantly, Indonesia's reputation as one of the
world's largest and most reliable exporters of LNG
since the late 1970s must be protected. Hence, gas
supplies to the Arun NGL plant must receive top
priority to enable it to honor its long-term contracts
with power companies in Japan and South Korea. 

Some may also argue that shutting down the AAF plant
will not cause big losses because the shareholders
have likely already recouped their investment. At the
least, after more than 23 years of operation, in terms
of capital costs AAF should have been written off by
now. 

However, AAF is not an ordinary factory. It was the
largest and the first of only two joint industrial
projects ever undertaken by the governments of ASEAN
member countries. 

Simply closing down the plant would be damaging to the
spirit of ASEAN cooperation, even more so because the
condition of AAF could be partly blamed on the
Indonesian government's natural-gas policy of focusing
on exports of raw gas at the expense of domestic
industries such as AAF, which create added value and
jobs. 

The proven reserves in the Arun field have been known
since as far back as 1971, when the reservoir was
discovered by Mobil Oil. Hence, the development of
natural gas-based industries such as the NGL plant and
urea factories near Arun should have been designed
according to the supply capacity of the feedstock. 

However, the government allowed the further expansion
of the gas liquefaction and urea plants, accelerating
the depletion of reserves in the Arun field. In fact,
the establishment of the Iskandar Muda II urea plant,
which was completed only this year, shows that the
government, as the majority shareholder, is no longer
interested in maintaining AAF's operations. 

The protracted negotiations between ExxonMobil and AAF
over the pricing of gas for their new sale and
purchase agreement last year, and the subsequent
deadlock that led to the abrupt stoppage of the gas
supply to AAF, further hinted at the government's
intention to simply let AAF die off naturally. The
government should have intervened in the negotiations
if it was serious about sustaining the company. 

The government should have realized that pricing and
long-term contracts are the most vital factors in
completing gas supply agreements, because gas is not a
freely traded commodity. Different from crude oil,
natural gas cannot be stored for long periods. Once it
is produced and transported it must immediately be
delivered to buyers or users. Both buyers and sellers
need to make long-term commitments to justify the
investment needed to realize the benefits of gas
utilization. 

Not much information is available as to the financial
performance of AAF and the market competitiveness of
its urea. However, recommending AAF's closure without
first conducting a technology audit of the factory and
without exploring alternative gas supplies from other
fields in the country such as the Natuna islands, or
even from Malaysia, also a major gas producer, is an
utterly ill-advised move, especially when it was made
by an outgoing government. 

Hopefully, ASEAN governments will do their best to
resolve the AAF debacle. The plant is much more than a
symbol of ASEAN cooperation. Most ASEAN countries need
fertilizer for their agricultural development, and
building a green-field urea plant certainly would
require more time and need a much larger investment
than rejuvenating AAF. 
 



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