Puzzling Campaign Against Chevron Indonesia
In one of those episodes that
sends chills through international investors, Indonesia’s attorney general is
charging that Chevron Pacific Indonesia, a subsidiary of the US-based Chevron
Corp. took US$23.4 million from the state-owned BP Migas without performing on
a project to clean up contaminated soil. Six Chevron employees have been
arrested and charged.
The case was opened in September
2011 after a “complainant from the public” charged that the bioremediation
project, on the island of Riau, was riddled with problems, that two
subcontractors hired by Chevron had no experience in bioremediation and that
the project had never gone forward.
The affair is puzzling.
Apparently the entire oil and gas industry has backed Chevron and there is
considerable evidence that the oil company, Indonesia’s biggest crude producer,
followed all prescribed procedures. The Indonesian Petroleum Association, which
represents roughly 90 percent of the country’s oil and gas industry, issued a statement
this week defending Chevron Pacific, saying the probe could damage the
country’s standing with international investors and that the investigation
should be suspended.
The attorney general has refused
to drop the case and is proceeding, however.
The 52-member association
described the probe as “intentionally made,” and that it hasn’t been carried
out according to legal procedures. It called the prospect of criminalizing the
contract “a bad precedent carrying wide implications on the future of the oil
and gas industry in Indonesia.”
International investors have run
into increasing headwinds in Indonesia, mostly from rising economic nationalism
as the government has moved the rules, particularly in natural resource
extraction, to favor domestic companies.
Chevron has been operating in the
country since 1924 and has amassed a solid record of social partnership,
sponsoring schools, working with communities in disaster relief, developing
small businesses, building infrastructure and providing health services.
Special investment programs have cost the company US$135 million, according to
the company’s website.
Chevron spokesmen in Indonesia
and Singapore were unreachable. However, in previous statements, the oil giant
has said the standard production sharing contract under which Chevron operates
dictates that regulation of projects eligible for cost recovery fall with
BPMigas and government auditors, not the attorney general, and that no state
funds had been used in the execution of the project. BPMigas has also repeated
that the state has lost nothing.*
CPI’s vice president for
government policy and public affairs, Yanto Sianipar, was quoted in Jakarta
earlier as saying the six employees had conducted their duties in line with
Indonesian law. The case, he said, is worrying not only to Chevron but also to other
companies doing business in Indonesia.
A source in Jakarta told Asia
Sentinel that the unnamed complainant may be connected to one of the two major
political parties, either Golkar or the Democrats headed by President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono. However, it’s difficult to figure out what the motive would
be. The project has been underway since 2003.
According to M. Adi Toegarisman,
a spokesman for the attorney general, the probe revolves around a complaint
that the two companies appointed by Chevron to carry out the project didn’t
have expertise in bioremediation, causing investigators to suspect that the
project was bogus. This was despite the fact that, since 2003, Chevron has
reclaimed the costs for work completed, not as a lump sum prior to the initiation
of the project, and has continued to show evidence of progress.
Both Chevron and BP Migas say the
project has proceeded without incident and that it has reclaimed 3 million
cubic meters of soil which already has been used to reforest 60 hectares of
land in Riau. An inspection of the site by the Jakarta-based magazine Tempo
confirmed the progress.
“We are pioneers in
bioremediation techniques,” Yanto told the Jakarta-based Tempo Magazine.
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