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Indonesia determines 54 oil and gas blocks to provide to 2028

Indonesia has identified 54 oil and gas blocks that have the possible to be used to financiers approximately 2028, an energy ministry director stated on Thursday, as the Southeast Asian nation races to renew oil and gas reserves.

The federal government is keen to reverse the decreasing pattern of Indonesia's oil production and aims to achieve an output of one million barrels of oil each day and 12 billion standard cubic feet daily of gas by 2030.

Half of the 54 blocks are anticipated to be used until 2028 in regular auctions, while the other half will be granted through direct offer following a joint study of the blocks, Ariana Soemanto, a director at the energy ministry, told participants of the Indonesia Petroleum Association conference.

The energy minister stated the government is focusing its efforts on increasing the exploration of its lots of untapped hydrocarbon basins as Indonesia released offerings for 5 oil gas blocks this week.

On the other hand, the upstream regulator SKK Migas is eager to promote exploration into the often-considered fully grown area of western Indonesia. The North Sumatra and Northeast Java basins there have stayed under-explored, according to SKK Migas.

The North Sumatra and Northeast Java basins were each estimated to have over 9 billion barrels of oil equivalent yet to be found, Nanang Abdul Manaf, advisor to the SKK Migas chief, said at the exact same conference.

Mubadala has just revealed a 2nd huge discovery through the Tangkulo-1 expedition well, which shows the huge hydrocarbon capacity in this location, he said.

Mubadala Energy said on Monday its Tangkulo-1 exploration well had actually found gas in the South Andaman Block, situated around 100 km (62 miles) off northern Sumatra, where it stated there was potential of more than 2 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of gas-in-place.

It followed the discovery in the Layaran-1 well with the possible for more than 6 tcf of gas-in-place, which analysts said was the world's second-largest deep water discovery last year.

(source: Reuters)