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Petronas looks abroad to help cut production costs
Petronas looks abroad to help cut production costs

Business Times

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Business Times

Petronas looks abroad to help cut production costs

[KUALA LUMPUR] Malaysia's state-owned oil and gas company Petronas is looking to expand output from more affordable assets abroad in an effort to cut production costs and rein in declining profits. Petronas is seeking to produce oil at a break-even level of US$50 per barrel, from US$60 to US$70 in the past five years, said Mohd Jukris Abdul Wahab, the chief executive officer of Petronas' upstream business, which includes exploring, developing and extracting oil and gas. The firm will focus more on countries where it already has a presence, including Canada, Suriname, Brazil, Turkmenistan and several South-east Asian nations. Still, Petronas does not rule out going into a new country if it provided 'headroom for us to grow', he added. 'We want to reshape the entire portfolio,' Jukris said in an interview on Jun 13 on the 79th floor of the steel-clad Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur. 'We are preparing ourselves, moving into a more volatile environment in the future.' Petronas is shifting its strategy as a drop in crude prices from a recent peak in 2022 slashed profits and forced the company to lower dividends. The state-owned company said earlier this month that it will cut about 10 per cent of its workforce to reduce costs. While crude prices recovered some of the lost ground on Friday (Jun 13) after Israel's air strikes on Iran fuelled concerns of a wider conflict in the Middle East, the supply-demand outlook for oil points to more pressure in the longer term. A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 8.30 am Asean Business Business insights centering on South-east Asia's fast-growing economies. Sign Up Sign Up 'Any capital deployment for our international asset has got to provide a healthy return,' Jukris noted. 'We are dealing with a lot more risk in some of the geographies that we are present.' Petronas' woes pose a challenge for Malaysia's government, which relies on the company for billions of US dollars in income. The national oil company has pledged RM32 billion (S$9.7 billion) in dividends this year, down from RM50 billion in 2022. The firm said in September that over the 50 years since its inception in 1974, it had injected RM1.4 trillion into the nation's economy through dividends, taxes and cash payments. The company plans to increase the net present value of its international upstream contributions to about 60 per cent within the next five to 10 years, from about 40 to 50 per cent now, said Jukris, who started his career at the firm in 1990. Petronas produces the equivalent of about two million barrels of oil per day in Malaysia and around 700,000 barrels abroad, Jukris said. To maintain this level of production in the face of declining output from older assets the company needs to bring in new fields, he added. Even as Petronas looks for new assets abroad, Jukris is optimistic that Malaysia's reserves will last for 'years to come', because investors keep making new discoveries. He said that there is still untapped potential in the country, including off the coast of Peninsular Malaysia where international oil companies have shown interest to explore. 'For the last 10, 15 years, we have been saying that our reserves will last only 15 years,' Jukris said. 'So today, we will also last another 15, 20 years.' BLOOMBERG

MACC to question Tan Sri again Thursday over highway fund misappropriate
MACC to question Tan Sri again Thursday over highway fund misappropriate

Sinar Daily

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Sinar Daily

MACC to question Tan Sri again Thursday over highway fund misappropriate

The statement will be recorded at the individual's residence in the federal capital at 9am. 16 Jun 2025 03:56pm MACC chief commissioner Tan Sri Azam Baki - BERNAMA FILE PIX KUALA LUMPUR - The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) is scheduled to resume recording a statement this Thursday from an individual with the title Tan Sri, as part of investigations into the alleged misappropriation of sukuk funds for a highway construction project in the Klang Valley. Its Chief Commissioner Tan Sri Azam Baki, when contacted, confirmed that the statement will be recorded at the individual's residence in the federal capital at 9am. MACC is scheduled to resume recording a statement this Thursday from an individual with the title Tan Sri, as part of investigations into the alleged misappropriation of sukuk funds for a highway construction project in the Klang Valley. On June 11, the MACC recorded an initial statement from the individual over a six-hour period, which was temporarily halted due to health reasons. Earlier, media reports stated that the MACC had seized various assets, including handbags, jewellery, luxury vehicles, watches, cash and high-end properties, collectively estimated at RM32 million, believed to belong to a highway concessionaire bearing the Tan Sri title. - BERNAMA More Like This

MACC to question Tan Sri again on Thursday over highway fund misappropriation
MACC to question Tan Sri again on Thursday over highway fund misappropriation

Malaysian Reserve

time6 days ago

  • Malaysian Reserve

MACC to question Tan Sri again on Thursday over highway fund misappropriation

THE Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) is scheduled to resume recording a statement this Thursday from an individual with the title Tan Sri, as part of investigations into the alleged misappropriation of sukuk funds for a highway construction project in the Klang Valley. Its Chief Commissioner Tan Sri Azam Baki, when contacted, confirmed that the statement will be recorded at the individual's residence in the federal capital at 9 am. On June 11, the MACC recorded an initial statement from the individual over a six-hour period, which was temporarily halted due to health reasons. Earlier, media reports stated that the MACC had seized various assets, including handbags, jewellery, luxury vehicles, watches, cash and high-end properties, collectively estimated at RM32 million, believed to belong to a highway concessionaire bearing the Tan Sri title. — BERNAMA

MACC to question Tan Sri again Thursday over highway fund misappropriation
MACC to question Tan Sri again Thursday over highway fund misappropriation

The Sun

time6 days ago

  • The Sun

MACC to question Tan Sri again Thursday over highway fund misappropriation

KUALA LUMPUR: The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) is scheduled to resume recording a statement this Thursday from an individual with the title Tan Sri, as part of investigations into the alleged misappropriation of sukuk funds for a highway construction project in the Klang Valley. Its Chief Commissioner Tan Sri Azam Baki, when contacted, confirmed that the statement will be recorded at the individual's residence in the federal capital at 9 am. On June 11, the MACC recorded an initial statement from the individual over a six-hour period, which was temporarily halted due to health reasons. Earlier, media reports stated that the MACC had seized various assets, including handbags, jewellery, luxury vehicles, watches, cash and high-end properties, collectively estimated at RM32 million, believed to belong to a highway concessionaire bearing the Tan Sri title.

Malaysia's oil giant Petronas looks abroad to help cut production costs
Malaysia's oil giant Petronas looks abroad to help cut production costs

Business Times

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Business Times

Malaysia's oil giant Petronas looks abroad to help cut production costs

[KUALA LUMPUR] Petroliam Nasional (Petronas), Malaysia's state-owned oil and gas company, is looking to expand output from more affordable assets abroad in an effort to cut production costs and rein in declining profits. Petronas, as the company is known, is seeking to produce oil at a break-even level of US$50 per barrel, from US$60 to US$70 in the past five years, said Mohd Jukris Abdul Wahab, the chief executive officer of Petronas' upstream business, which includes exploring, developing and extracting oil and gas. The firm will focus more on countries where it already has a presence, including Canada, Suriname, Brazil, Turkmenistan and several South-east Asian nations. Still, Petronas does not rule out going into a new country if it provided 'headroom for us to grow,' he said. 'We want to reshape the entire portfolio,' Jukris said in an interview on Jun 13 on the 79th floor of the steel-clad Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur. 'We are preparing ourselves, moving into a more volatile environment in the future.' Petronas is shifting its strategy as a drop in crude prices from a recent peak in 2022 slashed profits and forced the company to lower dividends. The state-owned company said earlier this month that it will cut about 10 per cent of its workforce to reduce costs. While crude prices recovered some of the lost ground on Friday (Jun 13) after Israel's air strikes on Iran fuelled concerns of a wider conflict in the Middle East, the supply-demand outlook for oil points to more pressure in the longer term. 'Any capital deployment for our international asset has got to provide a healthy return,' Jukris said. 'We are dealing with a lot more risk in some of the geographies that we are present.' A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 8.30 am Asean Business Business insights centering on South-east Asia's fast-growing economies. Sign Up Sign Up Petronas' woes pose a challenge for Malaysia's government, which relies on the company for billions of US dollars in income. The national oil company has pledged RM32 billion (S$9.7 billion) in dividends this year, down from RM50 billion in 2022. The firm said in September that over the 50 years since its inception in 1974, it had injected RM1.4 trillion into the nation's economy through dividends, taxes and cash payments. The company plans to increase the net present value of its international upstream contributions to about 60 per cent within the next five to 10 years, from about 40 to 50 per cent now, said Jukris, who started his career at the firm in 1990. Petronas produces the equivalent of about two million barrels of oil per day in Malaysia and around 700,000 barrels abroad, Jukris said. To maintain this level of production in the face of declining output from older assets the company needs to bring in new fields, he said. Even as Petronas looks for new assets abroad, Jukris is optimistic that Malaysia's reserves will last for 'years to come', because investors keep making new discoveries. He said there is still untapped potential in the country, including off the coast of Peninsular Malaysia where international oil companies have shown interest to explore. 'For the last 10, 15 years, we have been saying that our reserves will last only 15 years,' Jukris said. 'So today, we will also last another 15, 20 years.' BLOOMBERG

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