Confirmed
"Petromin shut
By ISAAC NICHOLAS
PRIME Minister Peter O’Neill will today announce a major government decision to realign all major State corporate entities, including the dismantling of Petromin PNG Holdings.
A recent National Executive Council decision 85/2013 approved the repeal of Petromin Act, effectively dismantling Petromin Holdings.
A spokesman for the Prime Minister said Mr O’Neill will hold a media conference today to announce details of the NEC decision to restructure State holdings or interests in petroleum and mining assets. “Petromin will be dismantled and all its holdings transferred to the new entities to be set up. The new entities will manage the State's mining interests separately from the petroleum interests, in line with current global practice which oil and gas majors are pursuing,” the spokesman told the Post-Courier last night.
“Since it bought Tolukuma Mines (in Central province), Petromin has suffered losses. It also took up interest in the PNG LNG project (0.2 percent) on behalf of the State, which already has 16.5 percent equity through Kroton.”
The spokesman said the duplication and overlapping of participation only creates confusion and dilemma. The restructure will remove this scenerio, and create more focus beneficial to the State. Petromin was set up by the Somare government.
Joshua Kalinoe has resigned as CEO of Petromin on his own accord and staff of Petromin will be deployed to the new entity.
The short response from the Prime Minister’s office follows reports by PNGIndustryNews.net that Petromin Holdings Limited has been disbanded, with its mining and petroleum assets transferred to two other state owned companies and Petromin’s long-standing managing director and chief executive officer Mr Kalinoe has tendered his resignation.
A Petromin spokesman confirmed to PNGIndustryNews.net that Mr Joshua Kalinoe had resigned effective April 4.
The spokesman said Petromin’s mining and mineral exploration assets would go to a new State-owned entity, Kumul Minerals, while its petroleum assets would go to a separate but similarly named Kumul Petroleum.
The spokesman said the changes made all of Petromin’s staff redundant, but there were opportunities for its staff to go to the two new companies.
With discussions ongoing, he said legislation had to be amended and the administrative side of things was being looked into.
One administrative issue is what will happen with the modern offices of Petromin Haus at Boroko in NCD. The spokesman’s hunch is that the “petroleum guys might get a different building”.
Another issue is what will happen to the strategic alliance struck by Royal Dutch Shell with Petromin in 2011.
On this matter, he suggested PNG to wait and see.
“Let’s hope that will continue,” he said. “I’m not sure at this stage how that will evolve.”
PNGIndustryNews.net has separately heard that the 16.6 percent stake of the PNG LNG project held by State-owned Independent Public Business Corporation’s National Petroleum Company of PNG (NPCP) might end up under the Kumul Petroleum umbrella, but this is yet to be confirmed.
One source said that former prime ministers were going to be on the board of the holding company of the two Kumul entities while another source said the new structure would have PM O’Neill as the trustee.
Former PMs who are part of the O’Neill coalition Government include Grand Chief Sir Michael Somare, Sir Julius Chan and Paias Wingti.
Petromin’s existing assets include the Tolukuma Gold Mine and a string of associated exploration licences, a 22.5 percent stake of the Elk-Antelope field underpinning InterOil’s Gulf LNG project, a 0.2 percent stake of the PNG LNG project with an 11.28 percent interest in the central Moran field, plus a series of unproven offshore petroleum prospecting licence applications in northern PNG.
Petromin also has a 30 percent stake in Nautilus Minerals’ Solwara deep-sea mining project in PNG, with Nautilus claiming it owes more than $A50 million for its share of development costs so far.
Kumul Petroleum is actively recruiting for at least a dozen positions through job advertisements in the local press with the jobs ranging from human resource management to technical roles."
http://www.postcourier.com.pg/20130405/news01.htm