BACK
DOOR Newsletter on East Timor
home
| timor oil
| search
"In
last week's talks, we were willing
to defer our right to the delimitation of a maritime boundary ... In
seeking this solution, we are not simply looking for the Australian
Government to write a cheque or to hand out quasi-aid for an extended
period. We want an outcome that underpins our national development. One
element of a fair settlement that should be given full
consideration is to pipe the Greater Sunrise gas the much shorter
distance to a processing plant on East Timor's shores. ... It is
perfectly reasonable for the government of one of the world's
poorest nations to seek an outcome that directly tackles its great need
for economic development. Darwin already has one LNG plant to process
gas from the Timor Sea, which is why one fair outcome would be to put
the second LNG plant in East Timor." Timor-Leste
Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri,
Timor Sea Office
This page last
updated 5 Nov 2004
All East Timor seeks is a fair go
Mari Alkatiri, Prime Minister of East Timor
The Age
November 3, 2004
A poor nation wants to improve its lot using natural resources. But
rich Australia won't let it, writes Mari Alkatiri.
The talks in Dili last week between the governments of East Timor and
Australia were aimed at finding a way to resolve our overlapping
maritime boundary claims in the Timor Sea, which in turn would create
the environment for the Greater Sunrise oil and gas field to be
developed.
There is political will on our side to achieve a just settlement that
allows development to proceed. During these exploratory sessions, we
put a number of possible means of resource sharing on the table for
discussion. Unfortunately, we were told categorically that none of
these could be contemplated.
We were talking about East Timorese participation in the development of
the disputed resources. The Australians, unfortunately, only wanted to
talk about money.
The stakes are high for both nations, but it is fair to say these talks
were of vital importance to a country that after 24 years of brutal
occupation has no industry and most of whose people are desperately
poor and live a semi-subsistence lifestyle.
Greater Sunrise is much closer to East Timor than to Australia, but we
stand to gain only 18 per cent of the "upstream" royalty and tax
revenue, and nothing from the "downstream" revenues, in particular the
onshore processing should the gas be piped to Darwin.
Under the interim arrangements negotiated for the Bayu-Undan field, we
receive a much fairer 90 per cent of the revenue from oil and gas from
the field, but we get nothing from the onshore processing. A
500-kilometre pipeline and an LNG plant in Darwin are being built.
As ABC TV's Four Corners said earlier this year, Darwin is booming as a
result of the thousands of jobs created by the plant's construction
phase, and the Northern Territory's march towards statehood is being
propelled by Timor Sea gas.
Processing the Greater Sunrise gas in Darwin would lead to an even more
lopsided distribution of benefits. One Australian Government estimate
put the economic benefit to the Darwin region of about 100,000 people
at $22 billion.
In last week's talks, we were willing to defer our right to the
delimitation of a maritime boundary - which is inextricably part of our
right to self-determination - and opt for a solution that addresses
Australia's concerns and delivers justice, fairness and economic
development for our people.
This solution could be based on resource sharing along similar lines to
the Timor Sea Treaty, rather than a permanent boundary. This was a
major concession on our part, because under a permanent boundary we
might treble the revenue that we are projected to earn under the
interim Timor Sea Treaty.
In seeking this solution, we are not simply looking for the Australian
Government to write a cheque or to hand out quasi-aid for an extended
period. We want an outcome that underpins our national development.
One element of a fair settlement that should be given full
consideration is to pipe the Greater Sunrise gas the much shorter
distance to a processing plant on East Timor's shores. Woodside
estimates the distance to East Timor at 150 kilometres, compared with
500 kilometres to Australia, and technology is no longer an impediment.
We asked the Sunrise partners to study this option in detail earlier
this year. In so doing we were exercising the regulatory power that is
enshrined in the Timor Sea Treaty. The Australian Government, in
seeking to find a solution, is able to exercise the same power.
An East Timor pipeline and LNG plant have been on the table since the
meeting between our foreign ministers on August 11 that focused on
"resource sharing" to resolve the dispute. Such an outcome would mean
much more than more revenue. It would mean that in resolving the Timor
Sea dispute we would be finding a fair means of sharing the upstream
revenue as well as the downstream benefits, including processing.
The dispute would be resolved in a way that spearheads the economic
development of this new nation. The construction phase alone would help
to create thousands of jobs, plus new businesses.
It is perfectly reasonable for the government of one of the world's
poorest nations to seek an outcome that directly tackles its great need
for economic development. Darwin already has one LNG plant to process
gas from the Timor Sea, which is why one fair outcome would be to put
the second LNG plant in East Timor.
I also believe it is imperative that a Timorese entity be allowed to
participate in the exploration and exploitation of present and future
resources.
East Timor remains willing to find a solution to our maritime boundary
claims that accommodates the Australian concerns, but we cannot accept
a solution that jeopardises our sovereign rights over resources.
Although we are disappointed with the outcome of last week's talks,
East Timor remains willing to reach a solution to the Timor Sea dispute.
East Timor and Australia are neighbours. We cannot stop negotiating.
Mari Alkatiri is the Prime Minister of East Timor.
27 October 2004
Paul Cleary
Communications director
Timor Sea Office
Office of the Prime Minister
PO Box 149
Dili, TIMOR-LESTE
Ph. +670 723 4151
Via the US: 212 963-0099 x. 6637
Via Australia: 08 8946 3900 x. 6637
Fax: +670 331 7413
http://www.timorseaoffice.gov.tp/
Receive
FREE email Web-updates: email wildwood@pcug.org.au
and include the words "Subscribe BACK DOOR" in the message
header.
To add items related to Timor Oil send to BACK
DOOR's email:
wildwood@pcug.org.au
Petitions,
Reports
& Position statements are especially welcomed.
Postal address: BACK DOOR PO Box 5
Lyneham
ACT 2602 AUSTRALIA
BACK
DOOR Newsletter on East Timor
home
| timor oil
| search
Website:
http://www.pcug.org.au/~wildwood
Email: wildwood@pcug.org.au