tugas soft skill article reported speech ekonomi bisnis
BP Migas Decision
November 16th, 2012 wira
Written by Michael S. Carl and
Dewi Savitri Reni
Download the Presidential
Regulation and its translation.
In an unexpected development with
profound implications, the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Indonesia on
November 13, 2012, announced a decision disbanding BP MIGAS, the upstream
regulator of the petroleum industry in Indonesia. In response, President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono that same day issued Presidential Regulation No. 95 Year
2012, which transferred the responsibilities of BP MIGAS to the Minister of
Energy and Mineral Resources (“MEMR”).
Both the Constitutional Court
decision and Presidential Regulation No. 95 Year 2012 provide that the transfer
of BP MIGAS’ responsibilities to the MEMR is temporary while the Government
amends Law No. 22 Year 2001 regarding Oil and Natural Gas (“Oil & Gas Law”)
to accommodate the Constitutional Court decision.
The Constitutional Court decision also provides that existing
Cooperation/Production Sharing Contracts (“PSCs”) remain in effect until they
expire or until such other date as may be agreed. The
Presidential Regulation similarly provides that all existing PSCs remain in
effect until their expiry.
The Presidential Regulation also provides that all operating
processes handled by BP MIGAS will forthwith be handled by MEMR.
As a result, BP MIGAS effectively
continues, at least in the short term, as a unit of MEMR. Ongoing upstream oil and gas activities in
Indonesia will likely suffer an immediate material disruption until MEMR issues
formal regulations granting the unit the appropriate authority. PSC renewals and tenders will also likely
suffer disruption while the Government contemplates how they are to be treated
in the new regulatory regime mandated by the Constitutional Court decision. We
understand that MEMR has already begun issuing some of the necessary
implementing regulations for Presidential Regulation No. 95.
The Constitutional Court’s legal
reasoning in disbanding BP MIGAS is closely tied to Indonesian
post-independence political and economic thought. The Constitutional Court
clearly believes that, in disbanding BP MIGAS, it is following precedent and
implementing very basic constitutional principles. In several places, the
Constitutional Court refers extensively to its own previous decision reviewing
the Oil & Gas Law issued in 2004. At
one point it also quotes a lengthy excerpt from a pamphlet by Mohammad Hatta,
one of the Founding Fathers and the first Vice President of the Republic of
Indonesia, regarding the nature of state power over natural resources.
To summarize, in its decision
announced November 13, 2012, the Constitutional Court ruled that, under Article
33(3) of the Indonesian Constitution, the State’s authority over petroleum
natural resources is absolute, to be exercised “for the maximal welfare of the
people”, and cannot be proscribed or restricted. The exact words of Article 33(3) of the
Indonesian Constitution are as follows:
“The earth and water and the natural wealth
which they contain are under the power of the State and utilized for the
maximal welfare of the people.“
Note: The sense in which the word
“power” is used in Article 33(3) of the Indonesian Constitution is not capable
of easy translation into English and is capable of multiple interpretations in
English.
Where BP MIGAS fell afoul of the
Constitutional Court’s legal reasoning is that it, according to the
Constitutional Court, was a legal entity, meaning that it was an organ owned by
the Government and not, strictly speaking, part of the Government, but
nonetheless exercised some of the authority of the Government pursuant to the
Oil & Gas Law in entering into and administering PSCs. In the view of the
Constitutional Court, the fact that BP MIGAS was a legal entity exercising some
of the authority of the Government had an important implication, namely the
Government was prevented from exercising directly its full authority over
petroleum resources. By law, the Government could not exercise the authority
that had been given to BP MIGAS. In its decision, the Constitutional Court
ruled that the Government cannot, in a law, prohibit itself from exercising
some or all of its authority over petroleum resources. Going forward, the
Government will likely have to posit cost recovery and other regulatory authority
in the upstream oil and gas industry with MEMR or another part of the
Government.
In the view of the Constitutional
Court, the interposition of BP MIGAS as the representation of the State in
relations with PSC holders, so that the State did not itself directly exercise
this authority, had the effect of degrading the power of the State over
petroleum resources and prevented the State’s power from being exercised
effectively for the maximal welfare of the people. In the Constitutional Court’s own words:
“At a minimum, this occurred for three
reasons: First, the Government could not directly exercise management over or
appoint directly a BUMN to manage directly an entire oil and natural gas work
area in the upstream sector; Second, once BP MIGAS signed a PSC, at that moment
as well, the State became bound by the entire contents of the PSC, meaning, the
State lost its freedom to make regulations or policies contrary to the contents
of the PSC; Third, the non-maximizing of State benefits for the maximal welfare
of the people, because of the potential for the control of the larger share of
profits from oil and natural gas by Permanent Business Establishments or
Private Legal Entities achieved based on principles of healthy, reasonable and
transparent business competition.”
The above passage is only one of
several in which the Constitutional Court disparaged the PSC system as
currently managed by BP MIGAS under the Oil & Gas Law. In another passage, the Constitutional Court said:
“In a PSC, BP MIGAS acted
as the representative of the Government as a party to the PSC with Commercial
Entities or Permanent Business Establishments managing oil and natural gas.
In this position, the relationship between BP MIGAS (the State) and the
Commercial Entities or Permanent Business Establishments was one characterized
as a private civil relationship, i.e., placing the position of the State and
the Commercial Entities or Permanent Business Establishments managing oil and
natural gas in the position of equals. For this reason, when the contract was
signed, the State became bound by the contents of the PSC. As a result, the
State lost its discretion to make regulations in the interest of the people
which were contrary to the contents of the PSC, such that the State lost its
sovereignty in relation to the control of natural resources, i.e., its
sovereignty to regulate oil and natural gas in a manner contrary to the
contents of the PSC. While in fact the State, as the representation of the
people in the control of natural resources, must have the flexibility to make
rules which bring maximal prosperity to the people. In the view of the Court,
the relationship between the State and the private sector in the management of
natural resources cannot be conducted on the basis of private civil relations,
but must be a relationship that is public in nature, i.e., the grant of a
concession or license which is fully under the power and control of the State.”
In essence, the Constitutional
Court decision seems to require the Government to exercise its authority over
petroleum resources by means of a concession or licensing regime in which its
authority is neither proscribed nor restricted. A concession or license holder
may enter into a PSC by which it farms in other participants and sets out the
terms by which it and they will operate the concession area, but the concession
or license, and hence the PSC, will at all times be subject to the absolute
authority of the Government to be exercised by the Government itself through
its own regulations.
The Constitutional Court decision
recognizes that there is a place for private sector participation, foreign or
national, in upstream petroleum exploration and production activities. The
Constitutional Court decision expressly states that, under the Indonesian
Constitution, the private sector may participate in upstream petroleum
exploration and production activities to the extent that the State lacks the
necessary technical, management or financial resources. The Constitutional
Court did not set guidelines for determining when the State lacks the necessary
technical, management or financial resources. The relevant political and
commercial discretion will, depending on the shape of future amendments to the
Oil & Gas Law and implementing regulations, rest with the Government.
That said, the Constitutional
Court also posits a clear preference for BUMNs over private sector entities,
foreign or national, in the management of natural resources. The legal argument
here is that the profits of a BUMN, unlike a private sector entity, belong to
the State, and hence are more consistent with the mandate under Article 33(3)
of the Constitution that natural resources be managed for the maximal
prosperity of the people. The Constitutional
Court states in its decision:
“In the view of the Court, direct
management by the State or by business entities owned by the State is what is
expected by Article 33 of the 1945 Constitution. Only under circumstances in
which the state does not possess the ability or lacks the ability, whether in
capital, technology or management, to manage oil and natural gas resources, may
the management of natural resources be surrendered to private entities.”
In another passage, the Constitutional Court states that, to avoid a
construction of the State’s power over natural resources, which is
unconstitutional:
“…the State may form or
appoint a BUMN to be granted a concession to manage oil and natural gas in
Indonesia’s legal Mining Area or in a Work Area, so that the BUMN then enters
into a PSC with Commercial Entities or Permanent Business Establishments, so
that the relationship is no longer between the State and the Commercial
Entities or the Permanent Business Establishments, but between a Commercial
Entity and [other] Commercial Entities or Permanent Business Establishments.”
The Constitutional Court also
appears to take this principle one step further by mandating the means by which
the private sector may be involved in the management of natural resources:
“In exercising State authority over oil and
natural gas resources, the Government performs administrative acts over oil and
natural gas resources by granting concessions to one or more BUMNs to manage
oil and natural gas business activities in the upstream sector. These BUMNs
then enter into PSCs with regional government state-owned enterprises,
cooperatives, small businesses, private legal entities or permanent
establishments. With this model, all
aspects of State authority as mandated by Article 33 of the 1945 Constitution are
actualized in implementation.”
The Constitutional Court thus
states a strong preference, and perhaps even a legal mandate, that future
concessions and licenses be issued to BUMNs like Pertamina. These BUMNs may in
turn farm in other participants, including private sector participants, by
means of a PSC to the extent necessary to obtain capital, technology or
management resources which the State and the BUMNs do not possess. However,
unlike the PSCs of today, the new PSCs will bind only their immediate contracting
parties. They will not bind the Government or supersede the Government’s
authority to apply its regulation requirements contrary to the terms of a PSC.
It is widely understood that the
Government is in the process of drafting a new oil and gas law. Given the
Constitutional Court decision, and the strategic position in which it places
Pertamina and perhaps other future BUMNs as potential concession holders and
PSC counterparties, it will be critically important to see how national
preferences are promoted or restrained in the coming regulatory regime.
One final point: In this and
other decisions, the Constitutional Court recognizes and has recognized that
its decisions are forward looking and do not have retroactive effect. This
means that we can now all look forward to a lengthy debate as to whether this
means that the terms of existing PSCs are grandfathered as a matter of law or
are now subject to the Government’s constitutionally-mandated absolute
authority over natural resources.
Download a pdf of SSEK’s
Briefing: BP Migas
http://blog.ssek.com/index.php/2012/11/bp-migas-decision/

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