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Subject: CSM: Oil windfall heads for East Timor
Christian Science Monitor - USA
August 03, 2004 edition
Oil windfall heads for East Timor
Asia's poorest nation is developing offshore fields that, in the coming
years, will yield billions of dollars.
By Carolyn Robinson | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor
DILI, EAST TIMOR Every week, Manuel Mendonca travels the dubious roads
around East Timor's jagged peaks and valleys on a mission: to tell his fellow
citizens about the wave of oil money that will soon crash upon the shores of the
world's newest nation. He's the government's one-man public-relations band,
educating a largely rural population in Asia's poorest country about the complex
issues involved in becoming a petrostate.
"Timor Sea oil is very important for our country and our future,"
says Mr. Mendonca. "People need a clear explanation so they can understand
what the government has already done for this country, and what else it proposes
to do. It's a great satisfaction for me to do this."
In between East Timor and Australia lies a series of lucrative oil fields in
the Timor Sea, some actively pumping, others still in the planning phase.
One of them, Bayu-Undan, is expected to yield more than $3 billion over the
life of the project, estimated to last about 20 years. This revenue will
significantly change the face of a country that currently generates only around
$25 million annually from local resources, mostly coffee.
Almost two years after the UN handed power over to the first elected Timorese
government, following decades of Indonesia's authoritarian rule, East Timor
remains the poorest nation in Asia and one of the very poorest in the world,
with the average citizen earning about 55 cents a day.
The local economy is largely propped up by the international donor community,
but East Timor now competes for aid dollars against larger and more immediate
global hotspots like Iraq and Afghanistan. Oil is East Timor's best hope for
true economic independence, observers say.
Oil is often a two-edged sword. Along with a windfall, places like Nigeria,
Venezuela, and Angola have faced unrest and corruption. Some experts say East
Timor's fledgling democracy may have trouble handling the challenges of oil
development.
"The problems East Timor faces are much the same ones facing any
oil-rich developing country, with the added problem of new institutions and a
democratic polity only in its first years," says Benjamin Smith, an expert
on extractive industries in developing countries. "Unless a way can be
found to insulate the use of oil revenues from the incentives inherent to
politics, it is difficult to foresee the revenues having a net positive
impact."
The government is taking steps toward safeguarding the funds. "It is
essential to recognize that oil and gas revenues are, for the foreseeable
future, East Timor's principal government revenue," says Ron Isaacson,
deputy director of the World Bank in Dili. "The government of East Timor is
determined to save much of its oil and gas revenues such that future generations
can benefit as much as current generations."
Exactly how much money will actually come to East Timor as a result of the
Timor Sea oil is not clear right now.
East Timor's leaders, to their credit, have been studying the lessons learned
from other petrostates and say they are determined not to let their country
stumble down the same rocky path. Shortly after full independence in May 2002,
Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri created the Timor Sea office, charged with bringing
information directly to the people because of the country's limited
communications infrastructure.
"Timor Sea issues are of significant importance to our future and the
future of our children. The Timorese people deserve the right to know how the
government is managing their future and deserve our assistance in explaining
what difficulties we, as a nation, face," Mr. Alkatiri says.
Alkatiri also supported British Prime Minister Tony Blair's transparency
initiative for oil-producing nations, meant to insure better accountability of
oil revenues once revenues begin to pour in.
Alkatiri's personal commitment to openness was tested recently when a small
American-Portuguese oil company filed a $10.5 billion lawsuit in a Washington
district court against Conoco-Phillips, alleging the oil giant conspired to take
away its claims to the Timor Sea fields through fraud, including an alleged $2
million bribe to Alkatiri, who vigorously denies this allegation. The case is
still pending.
Meanwhile, Manuel Mendonca continues his quest to educate the Timorese almost
one-by-one about their oil destiny. He travels the rough roads outside Dili to
visit all of East Timor's 13 districts - tough for any traveler, but especially
for Mendonca, a former independence fighter who was badly beaten by the
Indonesian military during the long years of its occupation. Most of his ribs
were broken - he survived, but he still feels pain. Each pothole is a trial as
he spreads much-needed information around his country on the coming oil boom.
He brings a portable projector, a small generator in case of power outages,
and a video produced by the Timorese government to explain some of the basics of
the complex story about the oil fields. Afterward, he patiently answers every
question posed by the villagers until everyone has spoken his mind - a process
that usually takes hours in the sweltering tropical heat.
Other measures to familiarize the East Timorese on their looming oil wealth
have come from the private sector. International nonprofits have initiated
briefing seminars to local community groups and journalists.
"Personally what I learned from the seminar was ... about the curse of
oil," says Joao Sarmento from La'o Hamatuk, a local nonprofit that monitors
aid activities. "Many journalists took part in the seminar and I do believe
that wherever they are they want to write some pieces about the issue for their
respective newspapers or magazines. Isn't this some progress?"
Australia and E. Timor tangle over oil rights
A country's sea boundaries were once considered to extend as far as its
continental shelf extended into the ocean.
But current international maritime law favors a newer formula - boundary
lines extend up to 200 miles from shore, unless the distance between two nations
is less than 400 miles. In that case, contemporary legal thinking suggests, a
median line is drawn halfway between opposite coastlines.
Under the newer scenario, 100 percent of the rich Greater Sunrise field in
the Timor Sea would belong to East Timor. But Australia is also claiming 100
percent ownership of Sunrise, under the old guideline.
East Timor's Foreign Minister Jose Ramos-Horta notes that the equidistance
principle is commonly accepted by the United Nations.
"We are supremely confident of our legal standing," he says.
"It is Australia that is worried about the weakness of their claims.
Australia wants us to accept that their maritime boundary comes some 50
kilometers [30 miles] close to our coast. We are demanding that a median line be
drawn between East Timor and Australia."
In a recent Australian TV interview, Australian Foreign Minister Alexander
Downer said of East Timor's demands: "I know they have their claims, and I
know they have their arguments.... But remember, we have our claims. And we want
to stick with our international legal principles, principles that have served us
in relation to negotiations with Indonesia, with Papua New Guinea, with New
Zealand."
Two years ago, Australia pulled out of the International Court of Justice in
The Hague, saying it preferred to negotiate its disputes with East Timor
bilaterally. Now a team of negotiators is demanding that Australia sit down at
the bargaining table every month to formally determine the boundaries between
the two countries. Australia says it can hold meetings only twice a year.
While the dispute rages, Australia has been pumping oil from one of the
contested fields at the rate of $1 million a day since late 1999. Each year,
revenue from this small well alone exceeds four times East Timor's total annual
government budget. The field is nearly extinguished.
"By the time this issue is settled, Australia could have taken all the
oil," says former American diplomat Peter Galbraith, currently a senior
diplomatic fellow at the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation in
Washington.
The pumping began just a few months after an Australian-led force squelched
the militia rampage that had destroyed much of East Timor after its vote for
independence from Indonesia. Many Australians who felt that their country's
military action had redeemed the blemish of Australian's support for
Indonesian's 24-year occupation of the tiny half-island state are now outraged
by their government's seeming attitude reversal toward their neighbor.
"It is simple. Australia is the richest country in the region, East
Timor is the poorest," says Australian Senator Bob Brown. "The oil and
gas fields are on East Timor's side of the sea, but relying in part on deals
made with Indonesian dictators, the Australian government says 'most of it is
ours.' "
Bound forever by geography, however, the two countries must find a creative
answer to the standoff.
"We are open to any ideas that may help us resolve this dispute with
Australia," says Mr. Ramos-Horta, "enabling the two sides to reach a
compromise solution soon."
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