Indonesia : Oil and Gas Sector Study
This study attempts to provide a broad, first cut review of the most pressing issues facing the sector, and to recommend ways to ameliorate or eliminate the problems. The main problems are: 1) petroleum product prices are heavily subsidized at the...
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Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2013
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/06/437073/indonesia-oil-gas-sector-study http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15255 |
Summary: | This study attempts to provide a broad,
first cut review of the most pressing issues facing the
sector, and to recommend ways to ameliorate or eliminate the
problems. The main problems are: 1) petroleum product prices
are heavily subsidized at the aggregate level and distorted
at relative levels, and thus need to be rationalized within
an economic framework; 2) the functions and role of the
state oil and gas company (Pertamina) are problematic, and
therefore Pertamina must be fundamentally restructured to
eliminate the conflicts of interest and inefficiencies; 3)
some of the provisions of the production sharing contracts
are relatively regressive and need to be re-evaluated with a
view to maximize the contribution of the sector to the
economy, and to increase upstream investment by the private
sector; 4) existing laws and regulations are inadequate and
must be replaced; 5) petroleum products are of poor quality
and must be improved, particularly by phasing out the lead
from gasoline; and 6) energy sector institutions are weak
and must be strengthened. Although the issues are complex
and sweeping changes are needed, given the current political
climate, this is an opportune time for Indonesia to begin
the process. As a first step, preparing an official and
comprehensive declaration of government policy for the
hydrocarbon sector is critically important--needed are the
vision for the sector, policy objectives, and policy actions
required to solve the sector's problems. |
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