Kisah ini memang sensasi  dalam sebulan ni. Ceriteranya telah mengundang ramai Bloggers menyuarakan pendapat masing-masing.  Selain daripada kisah Omar Ong yang telah dikatakan akan menjadi salah seorang Ahli Lembaga Pengarah PETRONAS, kisah Syed Hamid Albar ( x-Foreign Minister) yang akan menjadi Chairman PETRONAS juga banyak diulas di dalam blog-blog.  Semalam, RockyBru telah menerbitkan entry yang menyatakan Omar Ong tidak di terima menjadi BOD of PETRONAS atas sebab PETRONAS tidak menerima kakitangannya yang telah keluar dari syarikat itu sebelum ini. Berikut ialah petikan penuh entry tersebut:-

Rejected. The Board of Petronas has said no a recommendation to appoint Omar Ong as a Director on the Board of the national oil corporation.Petronas has a tradition of not taking back a former employee and Omar Ong, the Ethos Consulting boss who is often linked to the so-called 4th Floor operations under the Abdullah administration, is an ex-employee.But given the perception that Omar Ong is close to the current Administration, the decision by the Board of Petronas is quite sensational.Dr Mahathir Mohamad is Advisor to Petronas.
Sebenarnya kisah-kisah sedemikian memang menjadi suatu tarikan yang besar kepada rakyat Malaysia memandangkan PETRONAS merupakan penyumbang terbesar kepada ekonomi dan pendapatan negara. Satu per Tiga daripada hasil adalah daripada PETRONAS. Ianya memang jelas PETRONAS adalah hak rakyat Malaysia kerana ianya ditubuhkan bagi menguruskan sumber hidrokarbon negara dan memberikan balik keuntungan kepada negara (Petroleum Development Act 1974).

Namun begitu apabila kita mengkaji semula, sehingga tahun lepas, 40 % daripada pendapatan PETRONAS dijana dari luar negara ( pls refer Last Financial Year Report). Eksplorasi di Sudan, Egypt, Indonesia, Vietnam, Myammar, Mauritania, Turkmenistan dan banyak negara lain ( lebih 34 negara) telah menyumbang kepada ekonomi Malaysia. Jadi, sebagai rakyat Malaysia, kita patut berterima kasih kepada PETRONAS kerana telah menyumbangkan dana yang banyak untuk pembangunan Malaysia. Cuba bayangkan jikalau tanpa ‘leadership’ yang terbaik, mana mungkin PETRONAS dapat meneroka pasaran luar negara. Cuba lihat PERTAMINA ( Syarikat NOC Indonesia), masih tak dapat melawan PETRONAS walaupun Indonesia pada awal dahulu ( hingga sekarang la) adalah negara OPEC.

Cadangan untuk menukar kepimpinan PETRONAS adalah perkara yang paling teruk untuk dibuat. Kenyataan ini bukan untuk membela PETRONAS atau untuk menidakkan perkara yang baik(belum tentu baik), tetapi seperti kata pepatah ‘Hanya Jauhari yang Mengenal Manikam’. Bidang ‘oil and gas’ merupakan suatu industri yang tinggi penggunaan teknologinya dan hanya mereka yang bergelut siang dan malam dengan benda ini saja yang lebih mengetahuinya. Saya percaya PETRONAS juga mempunyai pilihan mereka sendiri bagi menjaga rantaian kepimpinan PETRONAS. Seperti yang kita selalu lihat melalui iklan-iklan PETRONAS, saya percaya kakitangan PETRONAS juga mempunyai jatidiri yang tinggi dan mampu mengerakkan PETRONAS ke aras yang paling cemerlang ( insyaAllah Dunia dan Akhirat).

JUNE AND JULY ( Jun dan Julai) : Kedua-dua bulan ini merupakan suatu tempoh yang agak ‘hangat’. Jikalau diimbas pada tahun lepas, pada bulan inilah kerajaan menaikkan harga minyak ke RM 2.70 / per liter yang telah banyak menggemparkan Malaysia. Tuduhan ke atas PETRONAS kononnya telah menaikkan harga tersebut dan kurangnya ‘pengorbanan’ PETRONAS membantu rakyat Malaysia menyebabkan Presiden PETRONAS terpaksa muncul di kaca TV nasional menyuraikannya.

Tahun ini Jun dan Julai diharap tidaklah sebegitu….  Pada kebiasaannya PETRONAS melalui Presiden/CEOnya akan mengumumkan Laporan Kewangan PETRONAS bagi tahun 2008/2009 pada akhir bulan Jun. Melalui laporan ini, Rakyat akan dapat menilai sumbangan PETRONAS kepada negara walaupun harga minyak yang jatuh memungkinkan pendapatan PETRONAS akan berkurang. Nilai perbelanjaan di jangka semakin bertambah kerana permintaan ‘facilities’ bagi industri oil and gas yang tinggi menyebabkan kos semakin bertambah. Walau apapun nilainya.. besar atau kecil, saya percaya PETRONAS telah membuat yang terbaik bagi bersama-sama membangunkan Malaysia melalui usaha mereka. ( Harap GLC lain juga berusaha gigih)

Bulan Julai merupakan suatu yang ditunggu-tunggu bagi setiap ‘Corporation’ atau syarikat di dunia ini. Ini adalah kerana FORTUNE 500 akan mengeluarkan senarai mutakhir 500 companies yang terbaik/terbesar di dunia melalui nilai pendapatannya (revenue). Pada tahun lepas, PETRONAS di tangga ke 95 dunia dan tahun ini dijangka semakin bertambah baik kerana banyak syarikat di sektor lain terjejas teruk akibat kemelesetan ekonomi dunia. Mungkin kalian pembaca di sini merasakan angka 95 itu suatu kedudukan yang tidak termahsyur. Tetapi harus diingat sekirannya PETRONAS ini adalah diperbadankan di Australia  (negara maju kononnya), PETRONAS adalah perbadanan yang terbesar di sana.

Begitu lah skala PETRONAS buat masa ini. Bukan lagi syarikat yang mahu menyerap secara senyap-senyap syarikat-syarikat kecil di dalam negara. PETRONAS sudah tentunya bukan lagi jagohan kampung yang hanya tahu memberi alasan kenapa tidak perform. PETRONAS kini bukan lagi seperti pengutip cukai daripada PSC contractor seperti tahun-tahun awal kewujudannya tetapi developer / operator yang berjaya. GLC Malaysia bukan lagi lawan PETRONAS ( walaupun Sime Darby(Synergy Drive) yang kini menjadi syarikat perladangan terbesar di dunia) jika dikira dalam hal nilai dan untung rugi.

Jadi persoalannya :

Kenapa masih mahu meminggirkan pilihan PETRONAS dalam menetapkan kepimpinan mereka sendiri. (Walaupun Omar Ong ditolak, tidak bermakna kerajaan tidak berhak untuk mengenominasi calon mereka, tetapi adalah menjadi hak PETRONAS untuk memilih pemimpin daripada calon-calon yang ada)
 

Bernama has reported that Cuepacs President,  Omar Osman said Civil servants will be able to accumulate up to 150 days of their leave for their gold-en handshake beginning next year. He added that he was informed about the longer golden handshake by the Director-General of the Public Service Department, Tan Sri Ismail Adam, at a meeting here yesterday.

The golden handshake is the cash in lieu annual leave accumulated that civil servants will receive upon retirement.  Currently, a maximum of 15 days leave can be accumulated annually for the golden handshake up to 120 days. Recently, government’s decision to reduce the annual leave for new employees from 30 days to 25 days beginning next year.  

This is a very good news to all Civil Servants compares to private sector or even GLC workforces. I am working in GLC company but my annual leave only 15 days per year for first 5 years of service in company. Golden Handshake Option; ‘jauh panggang dari api’.

 

 

I’m very sad when Malaysian and our politicians use the fuel price issue to criticize PETRONAS.  In Malaysia, we have not less than 35 Government-Linked Companies (GLCs) (see http://www.pcg.gov.my/trans_manual.asp) or maybe more if not a few of them went ‘DOWN’. Logically, all GLCs should perform and contribute money/fund to government but as we are all aware some of them need government to help or fund them (kerajaan tolong lagi). So please, don’t complaint PETRONAS since they’re helping Malaysian since 1974. What we should do is focus to other GLCs and makes them a part of Malaysia ‘Piggy Bank’.

 

Dengan kata mudah sebab yang ni adalah fakta yang benar:

Daripada RM 1.00 yang PETRONAS untung, RM0.65 adalah dipulangkan kepada kerajaan, (dengan kata lain, untuk Rakyat la ni)….    BOLEH KE TAK ANDA CUBA BAYANGKAN KALAU ANDA BUKA BUSINESS, DAN APABILA ANDA UNTUNG SERINGGIT, 65 SEN DI SEDEKAHKAN KEPADA ORANG LAIN. CUBA LA FIKIR……..

 

And also, please be informed that Oil and Gas industry is one of the High Risk Environments to work untuk mencari rezeki,  so pease don’t envy of what PETRONAS staff is getting because I know a lot of company out there is giving more.

 

LASTLY PLS READ THIS 

 

Dear all,

 

After reading all the chain mails and blogs, I feel called to reply, because of the relentless attacks and allegations — most of which are inaccurate or baseless — against PETRONAS.

 

PETRONAS’ STAFF SALARY & BONUS

1) The salaries paid to PETRONAS’ employees are not as high as people think. At best, they are just industry average. And these are not attractive enough for some who left PETRONAS to find work at other companies (mainly from the Middle East) which are willing to pay more. Why do they pay more? The oil and gas industry worldwide has been facing acute shortage of qualified or experienced personnel, so most companies are willing to pay lots of money to entice and pinch staff from their competitors.

 

Bonus? There has NEVER been a bonus amounting to 6 months or 12 months throughout the 33 years. On average, it is 2 months. But don’t ever think we don’t deserve it. We more than deserve it. A lot of us work really hard, some in the most extreme of conditions. Those who have been to and worked in northern Sudan, for example, would testify that it’s like working in a huge blower oven. Southern Sudan, on the other hand, is almost all swamps and mud. Imagine having to go through that kind of heat, or waddling in muddy swamps, day in and day out.

 

QUALITY OF CRUDE & REFINED PRODUCTS

2) Malaysia produces about 600,000 barrels of crude oil per day (and about 100,000 barrels condensate). Of this crude volume, 339,000 barrels are refined locally for local consumption. The rest is exported (and yes, because it has lower sulphur content it fetches higher prices).

 

Malaysia also imports about 230,000 barrels of crude oil per day, mainly from the Middle East, to be refined here. This crude oil contains higher sulphur and is less expensive (so the country gains more by exporting our crudes). In Malaysia, this crude is processed by PETRONAS at its second refinery in Melaka, and also by Shell at its Port Dickson refinery.

 

Different refineries are built and configurated to refine different types of crude. And each crude type yields different percentage of products (diesel, gasoline, kerosene, cooking gas etc) per barrel.

 

But most importantly, products that come out at the end of the refining process have the same good quality regardless of the crude types. That’s why PETRONAS, Shell and Exxon Mobil share the same pipeline to transport the finished products from their refineries to a distribution centre in the Klang Valley. The three companies collect the products at this centre accordingly to be distributed to their respective distribution networks. What makes PETRONAS’ petrol different from Shell’s, for example, is the additive that each company adds.

 

 

PETRONAS’ ROLE, FUNCTION & CONTRIBUTION

3) A lot of people also do not understand the role and function of PETRONAS, which is essentially a company, a business entity, which operates on a commercial manner, to mainly generate income and value for its shareholder. In this case, PETRONAS’ shareholder is the Government.

 

In 1974, when PETRONAS was set up, the Government gave PETRONAS RM10 million (peanuts, right?) as seed capital. From 1974 to 2007, PETRONAS made RM570 billion in accumulated profits, and returned to the Government a total of RM335.7 billion. That is about 65% of the profits. That means for every RM1 that PETRONAS makes, 65 sen goes back to the Government.

 

Last year, PETRONAS made a pre-tax profit of RM86.8 billion. The amount given back to the Government (in royalty, dividends, corporate income tax, petroleum products income tax and export duty) was RM52.3 billion. The rest of the profit was used to pay off minority interests and taxes in foreign countries (about RM7.8 billion – PETRONAS now operates in more than 30 countries), and the remaining RM26.7 billion was reinvested. The amount reinvested seems a lot, but the oil and gas industry is technology- and capital-intensive. Costs have gone up exponentially in the last couple of years. Previously, to drill a well, it cost about US$3 million; now it costs US$7 million. The use of rigs was US$200,000 a day a couple of years ago; now it costs US$600,000 a day. 

 

A lot of people also do not realise that the amount returned by PETRONAS to the Government makes up 35% of the Government’s total annual income, to be used by the Government for expenditures, development, operations, and yes, for the various subsidies. That means for every RM1 the Government makes, 35 sen is contributed by PETRONAS.

 

So, instead of asking what happens to PETRIONAS’ money or profits, people should be questioning how the money paid by PETRONAS to the Government is allocated.

  

 

CRUDE EXPORTS & FUEL PRICES

4) A lot of people also ask, why Malaysia exports its crude oil. Shouldn’t we just stop exporting and sell at cheaper prices to local refiners? If Malaysia is an oil exporting country, why can’t we sell petrol or diesel at cheaper prices like other oil producing countries in the Middle East?

 

I guess I don’t have to answer the first couple of questions. It’s simple economics, and crude oil is a global commodity.

 

Why can’t we sell petrol and diesel at lower prices like in the Middle East? Well, comparing Saudi Arabia and other big producers to Malaysia is like comparing kurma to durian, because these Middle Eastern countries have much, much, much bigger oil and gas reserves.

 

Malaysia has only 5.4 billion barrels of oil reserves, and about 89 trillion cubic feet of gas. Compare that to Saudi Arabia’s 260 billion barrels of oil and 240 trillion cubic feet of gas.

 

Malaysia only produces 600,000 barrels per day of oil. Saudi Arabia produces 9 million barrels per day. At this rate, Saudi Arabia’s crude oil sales revenue could amount to US$1.2 billion per day! At this rate, it can practically afford almost everything — free education, healthcare, etc, and subsidies — for its people.

 

But if we look at these countries closely, they have in the past few years started to come up with policies and strategies designed to prolong their reserves and diversify their income bases. In this sense, Malaysia (and PETRONAS) has had a good head start, as we have been doing this a long time.

 

Fuel prices in Malaysia is controlled by the Government based on a formula under the Automatic Pricing Mechanism introduced more than a couple of decades ago. It is under this mechanism that the complex calculation of prices is made, based on the actual cost of petrol or diesel, the operating costs, margin for dealers, margin for retail oil companies (including PETRONAS Dagangan Bhd) and the balancing number of duty or subsidy. No retail oil companies or dealers actually make money from the hike of the fuel prices. Oil companies pay for the products at market prices, but have to sell low, so the Government reimburses the difference — thus subsidy.

 

Subsidy as a concept is OK as long as it benefits the really deserving segment of the population. But there has to be a limit to how much and how long the Government should bear and sustain subsidy. An environment where prices are kept artificially low indefinitely will not do anyone any good. That’s why countries like Indonesia are more pro-active in removing subsidies. Even Vietnam (which is a socialist country, by the way) is selling fuel at market prices.

 

 

PETRONAS & TRANSPARENCY

5) I feel I also need to say something on the allegation that PETRONAS is not transparent in terms of its accounts, business transactions etc.

 

PETRONAS is first and foremost a company, operating under the rules and regulations of the authorities including the Registrar of Companies, and the Securities Commission and Bursa Malaysia for its listed four subsidiaries (PETRONAS Dagangan Bhd, PETRONAS Gas Bhd, MISC Bhd and KLCC Property Holdings Bhd.

 

PETRONAS the holding company produces annual reports which are made to whomever wants them, and are distributed to many parties and places; including to the library at the Parliament House for perusal and reading pleasure of all Yang Berhormat MPs (if they care to read). PETRONAS also makes the annual report available on its website, for those who bother to look. The accounts are duly audited.

 

The website also contains a lot of useful information, if people really care to find out. Although PETRONAS is not listed on Bursa Malaysia, for all intents and purposes, it could be considered a listed entity as its bonds and financial papers are traded overseas. This requires scrutiny from investors, and from rating agencies such as Standard & Poor and Moody’s.

 

 

BOYCOTT PETRONAS?

6) The last time I checked, this is still a democratic country, where people are free to spend their money wherever they like.

 

For those who like to see more of the money that they spend go back to the local economy and benefiting their fellow Malaysians, perhaps they should consider sticking to local products or companies.

 

For those who like to see that the money they spend go back to foreign shareholders of the foreign companies overseas, they should continue buying foreign products.

 

 

FINAL WORD (FOR TODAY)

I’m sorry this is rather long, but I just have to convey it. I hope this would help some of you out there understand something. The oil and gas industry, apart from being very capital intensive, is also very complex and volatile. I’m learning new things almost every single day.

 

 

Appreciate if you could help to forward this response to as many contacts as possible to counter the subversive proposal out there.

 

Thank you.

 

Visitors Since June 2008

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