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Timor
Australia, Timor and oil: the record
By Mike Head
6 June 2006
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In all the Australian media coverage of the Howard governments
latest armed intervention in East Timor, the words oil
and gas are hardly mentioned. Yet control over the
vast reserves beneath the Timor Seanow valued at more than
$30 billion due to rising world oil and natural gas priceslies
at the heart of the dispatch of troops and police.
Together with the wider strategic and commercial calculations
of the Australian ruling elite, domination over the Timor Seaand
blocking access to all foreign rivalshas been the overriding
concern throughout every cynical twist and turn in Canberras
policy toward East Timor over the past three decades.
Successive Australian governments, both Liberal and Labor,
accepted and collaborated with Portugals colonial rule over
the half island until 1974, when Portugals fascist government
collapsed. At about the same time came the first indications of
the undersea wealthoil exploration wells were drilled offshore
in the early 1970s, and rights were granted to several companies.
Eyeing this potential and fearing instability in Timor as Portugals
grip crumbled, Canberra, following Washingtons lead, encouraged
the Suharto junta in Indonesia to invade in 1975 and suppress
the population, ultimately at the cost of 200,000 lives over the
next quarter century. In return, General Suharto agreed to negotiate
an underwater boundary heavily in Australias favour, handing
it nearly all the seabed reserves under the 1989 Timor Gap Treaty.
After Suharto fell in 1998, and Portugal stepped up moves to
reassert its old colonial interests, the Howard government sent
in troops to support the formation of a nominally independent
mini-state in 1999. Ostensibly, the purpose was to protect the
Timorese people from Indonesian military and militia violence.
The media and all those, including an array of left
middle class protest groups, who called for the 1999 intervention,
claimed it marked a humanitarian turn in Australian
foreign policy.
It was nothing of the sort. Within months, the Howard government
was bullying and blackmailing the embryonic Dili administration
to ensure that Australia, not East Timor or Portugal, kept the
lions share of the oil and gas. In February 2000, just before
the Australian-led International Force in East Timor (Interfet)
formally handed power to troops of the UN Transitional Administration
for East Timor (UNTAET), Australian representatives insisted on
signing two critical treaties.
The first continued the Timor Gap Treaty, with the UN simply
replacing Indonesia as Australias partner in the joint development
zone. The second cleared the way for a US-Australian-Japanese
consortium to exploit the large Bayu-Undan field. Expected to
yield up to 400 million barrels of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG),
now valued at more than $5 billion, this gas field is 250km south
of Suai in East Timor and 500km northwest of Darwin. The agreement
foisted on Dili, however, involved building a pipeline to Darwin,
where the Houston-based ConocoPhillips has commissioned a $2.4
billion refining plant.
Both these treaties, initialled by UN officials, were designed
to legally bind any incoming independent East Timor
government. As for Timors people, in whose name Australia
had intervened, they were given no say in the arrangements whatsoever.
In October 2000, the Howard government flatly rejected a UNTAET
call for the realignment of the undersea boundary. If the borders
were drawn at an equal distance from both coastlines, in keeping
with international law, East Timor would be entitled to nearly
all the Timor Sea royalties and taxes.
Howard and his ministers issued thinly veiled threats of retaliation
against East Timor if it dared take the dispute to the International
Court of Justice. Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer
directly linked the future of Australias aid program90
percent of which was devoted to military purposesto the
size of royalties obtained by Dili. Downers colleague, Resources
Minister Nick Minchin, warned that a border dispute would destroy
investor confidence in the Timor Gap.
In March 2002, just two months before East Timor was proclaimed
the first newly independent country of the twenty-first
century, the Howard government announced it would no longer
submit to maritime border rulings by the World Court. East Timors
Prime Minister-elect Mari Alkatiri denounced the move as an unfriendly
act, tying the hands of his incoming government.
In May, a week before Prime Minister Howard flew into Dili
for the Independence Day celebrations, Alkatiri was summoned to
Canberra, where Australian government officials tried to strong-arm
him into signing an agreement ceding most of the vast $25 billion
Greater Sunrise field to Australia.
Australian-based company Woodside Petroleum, which is 34 percent-owned
by Royal Dutch/Shell, is the major shareholder in the Greater
Sunrise field, in partnership with ConocoPhillips and Japans
Osaka Gas. The area is thought to contain as much gas as the nearby
North West Shelf, Australias largest resource development,
which is also operated by Woodside. The North West Shelf has identified
reserves of 100 trillion cubic feet, sufficient to make about
2 billion tones of LPG, enough to meet world demand for more than
a decade.
Unable to secure full agreement immediately, Downer and other
ministers demanded that Alkatiri accept some form of treaty as
the new nations first independent act. Alkatiri
duly obliged, but signed the May 20 document without prejudice
to a final seabed determination.
From that point on, the Howard government repeatedly refused
to approve various agreements necessary to commence the Bayan
Undan and Greater Sunrise projects, thus starving the Timorese
government of desperately needed revenue, until Dili agreed to
delay or renounce its territorial rights.
The thuggish character of the negotiations was
revealed in March 2003, when the transcript of a meeting between
Downer and Alkatiri in November 2002 was leaked and published
on the Internet.
We can stop everything, Downer repeatedly declared,
threatening to pull the plug on the talks. Alkatiri pleaded with
Downer, We want to accommodate all your concerns, but accommodating
is one thing and scraping off a plate is another. Downer
reiterated that the boundary would not be redrawn, saying you
can demand that forever for all I care, you can continue to demand,
but if you want to make money, you should conclude an agreement
quickly.
The Howard government deliberately dragged out the border dispute,
all the time drawing revenues from the Timor Sea, while East Timor
sank deeper into poverty. During 2003 alone, Australia received
$US172 million in royalties from the fully operational Laminaria-Corallina
fieldtwice as much as the entire budget of the East Timorese
government.
With only a trickle of oil revenue and the drying up of international
aid, the government in Dili had little to spend on schools, health
care, housing or job creation. Five years after East Timors
so-called liberation by Australia, half its working
people remained jobless, 40 percent of the population were living
on 50 US cents or less a day, life expectancy was just 40 years
and infant and mortality rates were among the highest in the world.
During another round of border talks in April 2004, East Timors
President Xanana Gusmao joined Alkatiri in a series of public
pleas for relief from Australias merciless approach. Alkatiri
insisted that a new agreement that would give East Timor a greater
share of the offshore revenues was a matter of life and
death. Speaking to the Portuguese newspaper Publico,
Gusmao openly accused Australia of theft. In an interview with
the Guardian, he warned of dire political consequences
unless East Timor got a better deal. We would not like to
be another failed state. Without this we will be another Haiti,
another Liberia, another Solomon Islands.
Nevertheless, Canberras browbeating continued until,
in April 2005, Dili finally agreed to drop its border claims for
50-60 years. In effect, East Timor was forced to abandon its rights
for two generations, by which time the main oil and gas fields
will be thoroughly depleted.
So much for independence and Australian liberation.
The upshot has been that, in 2004-05, East Timors oil and
gas revenues came to a total of just $US25 million. This amount
is forecast to rise to $75 million in 2007-08. Apart from the
super-profits being made by the oil companies, the bulk of the
countrys royalties, $US550 million by April this year, are
frozen in US treasury bonds in a Petroleum Fund at the insistence
of the IMF and World Bank, supposedly to provide for the countrys
future.
Renewed intervention
The current troop deployment follows a number of key decisions
by the Fretilin-led government in Dili that sought to lessen,
or at least counter-balance, Australian hegemony over the Timor
Sea fields. Disturbingly for Canberra, these efforts have involved
Portugal. Washington, on whose support the Howard government depends
entirely, is also concerned about Chinas intervention.
* In December 2004, Alkatiri, who is also the countrys
Natural Resources Minister, announced that a consortium involving
Chinas largest state-owned oil group, China National Petroleum,
and Norways Global Geo-Services would conduct a full seismic
exploration of the Timorese side of the sea boundary. This immediately
raised the spectre of China and the European powers, which are
generally aligned with Portugal, gaining a degree of control of
East Timors reserves.
* During 2005, according to some reports, Alkatiris government
entered into talks with Chinas PetroChina to build refining
capacity in Timor, cutting directly across Australian plans for
the piping or shipping of all Timor Sea crude, from both sides
of the border, to Darwin. Alkatiri also called for undertakings
by Australia that it would not block the piping of oil from Greater
Sunrise to Timor.
While details have remained sketchy, these reports featured
in media, diplomatic and business commentary in the lead-up to
the Australian intervention. Writing in the Australian
on May 9, columnist Philip Adams declared that Alkatiris
insistence on having gas production facilities in Timors
Suai area rather than Darwin may open the door to China; PetroChina
seems to have the deal stitched up. Many in the Western diplomatic
and corporate communities think thats too close for comfort.
Loro Horta, the son of Timors Foreign Minister Jose Ramos-Horta,
wrote in the Asia Times on May 27: There was also
widespread speculation that Alkatiri planned to award a multibillion-dollar
gas-pipeline project to PetroChina, an invitation that would have
won both the United States and Australias ire.
* Last September, Alkatiri kicked off an international tour
to attract oil and gas explorers to East Timors own offshore
area of some 30,000 square kilometres, declaring that Timor-Leste
is open for business. In November he reported that these
efforts attracted more than 20 petroleum companies, among
them some of the biggest in the world.
* In January this year, after six years of bitter negotiations,
Alkatiri finally extracted a minor concession from the Howard
government. Canberra reluctantly agreed to a 90-10 share, in East
Timor favour, of the proceeds from part of the Greater Sunrise
fieldthe 20 percent that lies in the so-called Joint Petroleum
Development Area, which sits astride the disputed border line.
The agreement shares equally (50-50) the royalties from the remaining
80 percent of Greater Sunrise, in what Australia claims as its
exclusive jurisdiction.
Earlier the Howard government had insisted on a more aggressive
siphoning of revenues to Australia. But, in response, the Timor
parliament threatened to scuttle the April 2005 deal in which
Alkatiris government had agreed to abandon its claim for
the redrawing of the boundary.
* In February, the Dili government called tenders for its own
Timor Trough fields after the Chinese-Norwegian survey estimated
that the area held half a billion barrels of light oil, and some
10 trillion cubic feet of gas (about 10 percent of the total estimated
Timor Sea reserves). By the April 19 deadline, five companies
had submitted bids, either individually or in consortia. They
were Italys ENI, Portugals GALP (in which ENI is the
majority shareholder), Brazils Petroleo Brasileiro (Petrobas),
Malaysias Petronas and Indias Reliance. Noticeably,
none were from the US or Australia.
It was during this period, from early February onward, that
the destabilisation of the Alkatiri government began. On February
8, some 350 officers and soldiers abandoned their posts and marched
to the presidential palace, claiming discriminatory practices
within the military. The petitioners went on strike
throughout March, and the government in Dili responded by dismissing
nearly 600a third of the East Timorese armed forces. The
mass sackings triggered riots that began a descent into chaos,
which was soon exploited by an Australian-trained army rebel,
Major Alfredo Alves Reinado, who threatened a guerrilla war unless
Gusmao sacked Alkatiri.
* On May 22, with Australian forces already on warships off
the coast, Alkatiri announced that ENI, the Italo-Portuguese conglomerate,
had won the rights to five of the six exploration areas, with
Reliance gaining the remaining field. Alkatiri also confirmed
that his government would call for bids for onshore exploration
rights later in the year.
One immediate outcome of the eruption of unrest in East Timor
and the arrival of Australian troops was that Gusmao cancelled
a trip to China. He had planned to visit China, at the invitation
of President Hu Jintao, from May 29 to June 3, and Beijings
interest in oil and gas exploration was expected to be on the
agenda.
By sending troops and police the Howard government has moved
to secure its interests in the Timor Sea, as well as the wider
Indonesian archipelago. Despite the lip service being paid to
respecting Timors sovereignty, the latest intervention
continues, and escalates, a long history of Australian imperialist
intrigues against Timors long-suffering people.
The underlying agenda was spelt out in a leaked Australian
Defence Force (ADF) minute published last week in the Bulletin
news magazine. The classified minute to the Chief of the Defence
Force, dated May 10, 2001, stated in no uncertain terms that the
primary goal of Australias ongoing military presence was
to ensure that the fledgling Timorese government and its army
was sufficiently amenable to Australian interests.
The first objective, it said is to pursue
Australias broad strategic interests in East Timor, namely
denial, access and influence. The strategic interest of denial
seeks to ensure that no foreign power gains an unacceptable level
of access to East Timor, and is coupled with the complementary
objective of seeking access to East Timor for Australia, in particular
the ADF. Australias strategic interests can also be protected
and pursued more effectively if Australia maintains some degree
of influence over East Timors decision-making.
Predictably, the media blacked out any further reportage of
this damning document and its implications. The confidential minute,
written by the ADFs Strategic International Policy Division,
related specifically to the ADFs Defence Co-operation
program in shaping the development of the East Timor Defence Force.
Nevertheless, it set out in a nutshell the entire orientation
of Australian policy, laid down by the Howard government itself.
See Also:
Australia continues its unrelenting campaign
for "regime change" in East Timor
[3 June 2006]
Oppose Australia's neo-colonial occupation
of East Timor
[1 June 2006]
Why Australia wants "regime
change" in East Timor
[30 May 2006]
Australian military occupation
of East Timor proceeds "full steam ahead"
[27 May 2006]
Australian troops deployed
to occupy East Timor
[25 May 2006]
East Timor's "independence":
illusion and reality
[18 May 2002]
East Timor and protest
politics
[17 September 1999]
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