INDONESIA: PROSPECTS FOR THE OIL INDUSTRY

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CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3
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December 22, 2016
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October 1, 2009
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115
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December 1, 1968
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IM
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Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 I)o t_ jot Confidential DIRECTORATE OR INTELLIGENCE .Intelligence Memorandum Indonesia: Prospects for the Oil Industry Confidential ER IM 68-1'64 December 1968 Copy N6-. 81 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 WARNING This document contains information affecting the national defense of the United States, within the meaning of Title 18, sections 793 and 794, of the US Code, as amended. Its transmission or revelation of its contents to or re- ceipt by an unauthorized person is prohibited by law. GROUP I NIICLUUID -NOM AUTOMATIC UOKN011AUIN0 AND D[CLA[AIfICATION Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONFIDENTIAL CE14TRAL IiiTLLLIGLNCL AGL14CY Directorate of Intelligence December 1968 Indonesia: Prospects for the Oil Industry Summary Indonesia's rapidly growing petroleum industry is the country's only hope for a large increase in export earnings during the next few years. Oil production increased rapidly during the 1950's, but growth slowed greatly in the 1960's as a result of threats to nationalize properties of the three foreign companies that operated most of the country's oil industry. Unlike the other foreign-owned interests, however, the oil industry had not been taken over by the time of the 1965 coup, and much of its mechanized equipment remained in relatively good condition. Therefore, the in- dustry was able to respond rapidly to President Suharto's new policy of encouraging foreign private investment. Production of crude oil, which will increase 15 percent in 1968 and reach a record 580,000 barrels per day, will probably double by 1972. Almost all, of Indonesia's increased crude oil production will be exported, and this will make a major contribution to the country's pressing for- eign exchange needs. Petroleum exports were nearly $250 million in 1967, about one-third of total exports, and in 1968 the share will be even larger. Because Indonesia's exports of oil are expected to reach at least 1 million barrels per day in 1972, Djakarta's net receipts of foreign exchange from oil probably will be $300 million by 1972, compared with only $70 million in 1.967. Note: This memorandum was produced solely by CIA. It was prepared by the Office of Economic Research and was coordinated with the Office of National Estimates and the Office of Current Intelligence. CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONFIDENTIAL In the longer run the extensive exploration now getting under way could produce a genuine oil boom. At least.20 foreign companies already have signed exploration and development contracts, and the number of contracts soon may reach 30. Generally, the new contracts cover offshore areas in the shallow waters of the Malacca Straits and the Java Sea. While most of the companies in- volved are small and.medium-sized US firms, the major US and other international companies have now entered the scene. The sustained interest shown by foreign companies.in bidding for these areas indicates that these companies are highly optimistic about the prospects of finding oil and reflects favorably on the investment climate created by the Suharto regime. CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONFIDENTIAL The Setting 1. The Indonesian petroleum ir;.dustry was developed almost entirely by three major foreign oil companies during the half century before World War II. A predecessor of the Royal Dutch/Shell group began commercial production of crude oil in 1890, Stanvac* obtained concessions in 1912, and Caltex** in 1931. Petroleum production and ex- ploration activities increased rapidly until intelruptc d by World ~7ar II, which left the petro- leum industry in a shambles. 2. After a brief period of postwar reconstruc- tion during which the foreign oil companies re- ceived favorable treatment, the Sukarno government began to increase its control over the industry. Initially the main purpose of the government con- trol was to gain a greater share of the revenues, but as time went on, nationalistic objectives came to be predominant. In 1951 the government stopped granting new oil rights, and activities of the petroleum companies were limited to old conces- sions, pending the adoption of a new petroleum law. Company properties that had not been re- habilitated after the war or were inaccessible as a result of civil unrest reverted to the govern- ment. The government established tl.ree petroleum enterprises (now combined into one company? Pertamina), which took over some company proper- ties, particularly those of Shell, and extended government control over domestic distri;,ution and marketing. The investment climate worsened markedly in 1957, when President Sukarno intro- duced his "Guided Democracy" and announced he would extend government control to all sectors of the economy and limit all foreign investment in Indonesia. 3. During 1960-65 the government greatly tightened its control over the economy, including The Standard-Vacuum Petroleum Company is jointly owned by Esso Standard Eastern Inc-, and Mobil Petroleum Co. (formerly called Socony Mobil Oil). ** Jointly owned by Standard Oil Company of California and Texaco, Inc. CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONFIDENTIAL the petroleum industry, and as a result the growth of crude oil production slowed markedly. A new law in 1960 specified that explo'.tation of oil and natural gas resources was to be carried out only by state enterprises or by contractors for the state. Private investment in the petroleum in- dustry nearly stopped in the confusion that followed. The companies were subjected to a variety of political pressures amid recurrent rumors of impending nationalization. Finally, in June 1963, after more than two years of negotia- tions, the oil companies and the government signed an agreement in Tokyo covering profit sharing (60/40 percent in favor of the government), the duration of exploration and production rights (20 years for older holdings and 30 years for new ones), and government purchase of refineries (within 15 years) and marketing facilities (within five years). 4. The 1963 Tokyo agreement brought only a temporary end to uncertainty regarding the legal basis for foreign oil company operations. A year later the Indonesian legislature and the trade unions demanded nationalization of all foreign holdings, including the oil industry. And in early 1965 most US and other foreign firms, but not the oil companies, were taken over by the government. The oil companies were placed under temporary protective custody. By October 1965, when the aborted Communist coup occurred, the oil companies were the only important ffr;us remaining under foreign operational control. 5. Despite the Tokyo agreement, Sukarno obviously intended to eliminate all foreign oil interests except those operating on a production- sharing basis. His interpretation of production sharing was an arrangement in which the government held formal management responsibilities even though it might not take an active role, while the for- eign investor provided only technical advice and financial support fL.r which he received a share of production for a specified time. After that the project belonged entirely to the government. The prospects of government interference with management: and of eventual nationalization so completely discouraged the Shell Company that it CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONFIDENTIAL sold its interests to the government at the end of 1965. Stanvac also was negotiating to get out when the present military government under Suharto took control of Indonesia. Caltex, with substan- tially more profitable fields, was the only company willing to continue operations under Sukarno's rule. 6. Sukarno's policies caused a virtual cessa- tion of investment by the oil companies, except Caltex, and kept crude oil output considerably below what it could have been. Despite these problems, however, when Suharto took over the government, the oil industry was in much better condition than other sectors of the Indonesian economy. The iTature of the Industry 7. Indonesia produces about 3 percent of the Free World's crude oil and has about the same percent of proved oil reserves. The country is well located to supply high-quality crude oil to the rapidly growing Far Eastern market. Indo- nesia's crude oils have a low sulfur content, which makes them desirable in pollution-conscious countries. The major consumers of Indonesian crude oils are Japan, Australia, the Philippines, and the United States (mainly Hawaii). 8. Indonesia has about 50 producing fields on the three major islan63 (see Figure 1), but fields in Sumatra accounted for about 90 percent of the total output in 1967. Crude oil produc- tion increased from about 170,000 barrels per day (b/d) in 1922, the year in which production regained pre-Word War II levels, to about 450,000 b/d in 1962 and about 500,000 b/d in 1967. Lxports of crude oil have increased at about the same rate as production (see Figure 2). The substantial increase in output between 1952 and 1962 (i0 percent per year) resulted from expansion in all producing areas. From 1962 until 1967, output increased only about 2 percent a year because output declined in all areas, except in central Sumatran fields mainly operated by Caltex. The share of crude oil production accounted for by the government and the companies, by area, is shown in the following tabulation: CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONFIDENTIAL Percent of Total Crude Production Operator Area 1958 1962 1967 Caltex Central Sumatra 45 50 70 Stanvac Southern and Cen- tral Sumatra 23 15 10 Southern Sumatra, Java, Kalimantan 22 24 Government of Indonesia Northern Sumatra, Java, Kalimantan 10 11 20 a/ Total 100 100 100 a. Including areas formerly operated by Shell. 9. The shift in area and in producing :c pang is to a great extent the result of Sukarno's poli- cies. Stanvac and Shell held older concessions that were being depleted, and until after the Tokyo agreements in 1963 new lands were not made avail- able to them. In any case, these companies were unwilling to invest because of the political and economic climate of the country after about 1957. Stanvac let its properties deteriorate and did not make plans for substantial expansion until 1967. Facilities owned and operated by the government -- including the former Shell properties -- ran down because of poor management and lack of investment. Caltex, on the other hand, with prolific fields it had discovered shortly before World War II, had more to gain than the companies operating older and less productive properties, and the company substantially increased production. 10. Government refineries accounted for nearly 70 percent of total refinery output in 1967; Stanvac produced the remainder. Refinery output rose slowly during the 19501s, declined slightly during the first half of the 1960's, and has since remained at about 200,000 b/d. An increas- ing portion of the output is being consumed domes- tically each year, and consequently exports of petroleum products are declinifg (see Figure 2). CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONFIDENTIAL Only three of the seven refineries ship products outside their immediate area. They account, how- ever, for over 95 percent of the national capacity of about 275,000 b/d (see Figure 1). The Piadju (government-owned ex-Shell) and the Sungaigerong (Stanvac) refineries are both located on the Musi River close to Palembang in southern Sumatra (see Figures 3 and 4). Owing to declining production of crude oil in adjacent areas, these two refineries have become heavily dependent on crude oil being shipped by sea from other areas in Indonesia, especially from the Caltex fields in central Sumatra (see Figures 5 and 6). The shallow draught of the Musi River bar, however, generally limits tankers to sizes of about 8,000 to 10,000 tons. The third major refinery is the government-owned (ex-Shell) Balikpapan Refinery on the island of Kalimantan (see Figure 7) which also obtains more than half of its crude oil from central Sumatra because of declining production at local fields. The other small refineries are government enter- prises. Suharto and the Petroleum Industry 11. Since March 1966, Suharto and his col- leagues have successfully created an atmosphere both encouraging to former investors and attrac- tive to new ones. The government enacted a foreign investment law in 1967 which provides for guarantees on repatriation of capital, land use rights, special tax incentives for companies that increase foreign exchange earnings, and assurances against nationalization and undue interference in the control and management of foreign enterprises. The government also changed most of the prevailing special discriminatory foreign exchange procedures objected to by the private oil companies and gave them more freedom in establishing export prices. Djakarta, in addi'?ion, began paying off old debts to the oil companies, particularly to Stanvac. Recent TrendE and Pros ect 12. Production of crude oil in 1968 probably will be about 580,000 b/d, an increase of about 15 percent compared with a 9-percent inu:-ease in 1967 and a decline in output in 1966. Most of CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONFIDENTIAL the increase in 1968 and in the next several years will come from Caltex, which has the larc,ast in- vestment program of any foreign company in Indonesia -- about $24 million in 1968. A Caltex expansion program, including development drilling and construction of jetties and storage facili- ties, aims at increasing the company's production to 600,000 b/d by late 1969, compared with about 360,000 b/d in 1967. In addition to the very large Minas field (with an output of 250,000 b/d), Caltex has the Duri and Bekasap fields (30,000 to 40,000 b/d each) a_id twrr new fields at Permatang and Pungut which began producing in 1966. More- over, Caltex will soon begin drilling in the highly promising Lebo field (near Minas) and has discovered still another very promising field northwest of Duri, both of which probably contain low-sulfur Minas-type crude oil. Caltex now holds the best of the potential oil--producing lands and has been awarded for exploration some of the best of the former Pan American areas adjacent to its present producing areas (see inset on Figure 1). If its Lebo field alone proves out, as Caltex officials are confir'ant it will, Caltex production could go well over a million ba.:rels in 1972. 13. Aside from Caltex, other established pro- ducers are making improvements to at least arrest the dec'~ine in their output and hopefully to in- crease it in the near future. Stanvac's fields, v,nere output declined from 70,000 b/d in 1962 to about 55,000 b/d in 1967 principally because of lack of investment in machinery and equipment, are being rehabilitated and the company is con- tinuing to explore onshore and offshore for new fields. Stanvac's total new investments, includ- ing the refinery, were scheduled at $3.1 million .or 1967 and $4.1 million for 1968. Output of Pertamina, the government enterprise, which had declined from 160,000 b/d in 1962 to only 100,000 b/d in 1967, has prospects for modest increases from small fields discovered in southern Sumatra and on Kalirn=ntan by Pertamina and a Japanese contractor, 140SODLCO. Asamera, a Canadian company, also began operating in 1967 in northern Sumatra, but production has reached only 8,000 b/d. - 8 - CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONFIDENTIAL 14. The conclusion of contracts with new for- eign companies for exploration and eventual ex- ploitation greatly improves the outlook for developing Indonesia's oil resources. At least 20 companies, including Stanvac and Caltex, have been awarded one or more exploration areas each, and a number of other contracts are under discus- sion (see the table). The new companies are for the most part small or medi>?m-sized independent US firms, but there are also two Japanese companies and one each from Australia, Canada, Italy, and France. The new, large areas for exploration are predominately offshore in the shallow waters sur- rounding the Indonesian islands, mainly in the Malacca Straits and Java Sea (see Figure 1). The Indonesian government expects to bring the total number of foreign contracts to about 30, mostly for offshore areas, and to reserve the remaining onshore areas for government exploration. Expec- tations are high that significant new oil finds in these offshore areas, which have never been sur- veyed, will by the mid-1970's greatly increase Indonesia's output of crude oil. 15. In 1967 and 1968 t,iere was good progress in exploration. In order to reduce Japan's 90-percent dependence on the Middle East as a source of crude oil and to reduce its substantial expenditure of foreign exchange for oil imports, the Japanese government is giving financial sup- port to the three Japanese companies working i:: Indonesia. Large US oil and holdiiig companies (Sinclair, Natomas, Cities Service) bought into contracts already signed; and two major interna- tional companies, Mobil and Gulf oil, obtained concessions on their own. Wildcat drilling off- shore is under way in three areas held by Kyushu, Japex, and Sinclair. The Japanese estimate that imports of 200,000 b/d will originate from their areas beginning in 1970. 16. Indonesia's refinery problems are expected to be largely over by 1971. Two Japanese firms signed a contract at the end of 1967 to build a 100,000 b/d refinery at Dumai, the site of the Caltex pipeline terminal. As payment, the Japanese will take the low-sulfur heavy fuel oil to be produced at the refinery and will continue - 9 - CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONFIDENTIAL these purchases after payment is complete. This refinery will supply sufficient kerosine, some of which is now imported, for domestic needs, and Japan will provide a ready market for the fuel oil, which is the only form of petroleum other than crude oil that Indonesia now exports in quantity. Also some of the new exploration agree- ments specify that refineries will be built after a certain production level is reached. 17. The petroleum industry is clearly the most promising sector for a rapid expansion of exports. Production is expanding rapidly now and will probably double by 1972. Although the petroleum industry accounts for only about 5 per- cent of Indonesia's national product, it contrib- uted $250 million, or about 35 percent, of the country's gross foreign exchange earnings in 1967; in 1968 the share will be even larger. With expected production increases in the next few years, Djakarta's net foreign exchange receipts from petroleum will rise to about $300 million in 1972, about equal to the deficit in Indonesia's transactions on goods and services in 1967, when comparable receipts were only $70 million. - 10 - CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Indonesia: New Oil Explorati_"., Contracts 1967-68 Location of Company Origin _ Contract Area Japan Petroleum Exploration Japan Company (Japex) a/ Indonesian Indep-!r,dent American Petroleum (IIAPCO) Company/Siaclair,/Natomas Australian Drilling/Cities Service/Ashland Oil and Refining Caltex J International Oil of Australia Offshore east Kalimantan (Bunju Island area) Offshore east Kalimantan (Mahakam area) Japan Offshore south Kalimantan Offshore southeast Kalimantan United States Offshore north Java (Djakarta-Semarang) United States Offshore and onshore north Java (Semarang- Madura) United States Onshore Barito Basin in south Kalimantan United States Onshore and offshore northwest Sumatra (northwest tip to Bukittinggi, including bias Island) United States Onshore central Sumatra (ex-Pan American) Australia Onshore and offshore Timor Size (Square Miles) 13,000 March 1967 14,000 March 19E7 Aerial magnetic survey, 1967; seismic survey, 1968; drill, 1968 52,000 March 1967 Aerial magnetic survey, 21,000 Acquir?d from August-November 1967; seismic survey, 1968; drill, 19G8 Seismic survey, July 1967 - June 1968; drill, mid-1968 65,000 March 1967 Seismic survey, 1968; geo- Unknown, but January 1968 logical survey (Madura), complete; plan drill, 1968 very large Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Company Origin Phillips Petroleum/Superior United States Compagnie Francaise des France Petroles (CFP) Indotex (association of United States independents set up to operate in Indonesia) Virginia International and United States Roy Huffington Indonesia: New Oil Exploration Contracts 1967-68 (Contint.e i ) Location of Contract Area Offshore south West Irian Onshore and offshore south Sumatra.at Djambi East Kalimantan and south Sumatra Size (Square Miles) DP-.e of Agreement State of Exploration 125,000 May 1968 N.A. 10,000 July 1968 Survey in preparation (1,900 offshore) Offshore southeast Sumatra Ucntinental Oil United Stat_J 39,000 AGIP/SPA subsidiary of Ente Nazionale Indrocarburi (ENI) Stanvac (Esso and Mobil) Italy United States Offshore western tip of West Irian East side of Malaya between 00 and 50 N 38,000 Asamera Oil Canada Onshore north Sumatra 1,220 Mobil Oil United States Onshore north Sumatra 700 Frontier C11 United States South China Seas 38,640 Gulf Oil United States South China Seas 65,000 October 15"j8 N.A. October 1968 a,4. L.A. Survey in preparation October 1968 N.A. November 1968 N.A. December 1968 f:.r. a. Companies working in Indonesia prior to 1967. Japex acquired its first contract off northeast Sumatra in 1965 from Refining Associates (Canada). No contracts were signed in 1966. Caltex is the only company to obtain new area grant under old-type work contract. Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 ,PULAU MIANOA$ (Indonesia) t/,~ULAU KARANLLONO t ondeno mobagu G Tsrnnt~i I ` ( H . MAHIRA fx I V I O, INDONESIA OIL INDUSTRY PROSPECTS DECEMBER 196e I Mayor oil proc'ucing uren Pipeline 40 Siloctod ollfh.Id ^ Rofhiory Oil Concaaslon/Contract t3oundnrloa - - .- Definite ._ - - - Indefinite Q Aron less than 100 fathoms 12 Dopth In fathoms 0 100 200 300 StehIte Mlles ?-----_100 200 300 ,PULAt1\M1S00L -' ( (l l u..un1 / - 1 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 ? Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Figuhe. 2 Indonesia Production and Disposition of Crude Oi! and Refinery Products, 1952-67 1932 1933 1934 1933 1996 1937 1936 1939 1960 1961 1967 1963 1964 1963 1966 1967 Production of Crude Oil Refinery Output Domestic Consumption of Petroleum Products Exports of Crude Oil Exports of Petroleum Products Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONFIDENTIAL F.igune 3. I-tdonee.ia: The SheUU and S.tandand- Vacuum O.iJ'. Compan.iee Re6.ineniea at Palembang, Sum t.tka F.iguhe 4. One Pan* o6 the Catalytic Un.& at S.tanvac'd Sunga.i9enoit g Re6.ine4y at Palembang, Suma.tna CONFiru M'rIAr Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONVII)II;N'I'IA], F.igu'te 4. (Con.t.in(W(!) Add( ti0nae, 1'a'l t ti (';, thc' Sullcl,c(g("(nltg Re6(IIC't1/ r1t !'rzVewb tllr) F.igune 5. The Fc't,'ty a-id Smaf. Boat Land- ing at the Stau'ac Oi (' Rc!%neny P.ien on the Mu6i Rive-'c i-t Sumatra CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3 CONFIDENTIAL. F.tgu,7o 1. A.tmobphen',c Vi6- z,t.Q.Zation Unit at the Ba i.`z Papan Re-6Lnehy tn Bonneo CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2009/10/06: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600010115-3