Indonesia's Ministry of Energy and Resources (ESDM) and Italian energy firm Eni have signed an agreement on 2 February to accelerate decarbonisation efforts in Indonesia, further expanding Eni's presence there.
The ESDM and Eni will collaborate on the development of bio-feedstock for Eni's bio-refining business Enilive's refineries. Eni will also evaluate nature- and technology-based carbon offsets, as well as carbon capture, utilisation and storage, and energy efficiency opportunities to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from upstream and hard-to-abate sectors. More details on timelines for these studies were not disclosed.
Indonesian president Joko Widodo met with Eni's chief executive officer Claudio Descalzi on 2 February to discuss the firm's continuing activities in the country, announced Eni in a separate statement. Eni has expanded its role in the Indonesian gas sector over the past year. It announced the Geng North discovery — which has an estimated gas volume of 5.2 trillion ft³ — in October 2023, and the firm plans to produce gas from the field within four years, said Indonesia's upstream regulator SKK Migas in late January.
Eni last year agreed to purchase Chevron's Indonesian gas assets, comprising the Ganal, Rapak and Makassar straits blocks in the Kutei basin. The new 1bn ft³/d gas production hub that will be established in the northern Kutei basin, and the extension of the plateau at 750mn ft³/d in existing facilities in the southern Kutei basin will help Indonesia increase its gas production significantly for domestic use and export, said Eni.
Eni last year also agreed to buy private equity-backed oil and gas producer Neptune Energy, with which it partners on the Jangkrik and Merakes fields. Eni has a current equity production of approximately 80,000 b/d of oil equivalent from the Jangkrik and Merakes fields, according to the firm.
The discoveries and projects under development will significantly enhance the country's gas potential, said Descalzi, also in view of significant near-field exploration potential in Eni-operated blocks, which have been largely de-risked following the Geng North discovery.
Indonesia is targeting oil production of 1mn b/d and gas production of 12bn ft³/d by 2030. The ESDM is looking at various ways to achieve this target. The country late last month signed an agreement with Venezuela to collaborate in the oil and gas sector, under which Indonesia's state-owned Pertamina — through its Pertamina International Exploration and Production subsidiary — will also explore opportunities to acquire new Venezuelan oil and gas blocks.