THE Department of Energy Philippines (DOE) is expecting to  finish the technical evaluations for the oil and gas contracting round by the  end of the month, an official told reporters said.
Evaluations for the coal contracting round however are not  expected until July 2012.
"We are proceeding with the technical evaluation, by  the end of this month and we will finish at least the technical evaluation of  all the bids we have received. So after that we will recommend already to the  Secretary. Coal will be sometime in July because it's a larger number,"  said Energy Undersecretary Jose M. Layug, Jr. in an interview.
He added the department will be choosing "the best  bids from those areas with multiple bids for approval."
AREAS UP FOR BID
The government is offering 15 oil and gas exploration areas  in the 4th Philippine Energy Contracting Round.
The department earlier offered 12 other areas for oil and  gas exploration on April 27, 2012.
Three other areas will be bid out by the end of July 2012.
These areas are located in northwest Palawan, near the  Galoc oil field and the Malampaya natural gas field.
Of the 12 areas bid out last month, seven areas received  bids.
Some of the bidders included:
- Forum Pacific, Inc., a consortium of The Philodrill Corp. and Philex Petroleum, MinEnergy Pte. Ltd.,
- Loyz Oil Pte. Ltd., the consortium of Mitra Energy Ltd.,
- Kuwait Petroleum Exploration Corporation
- Tapoil Ltd.,
- Helios Mining and Energy
- Dil Moro Energy Corp.
- NorAsian Energy Ltd.,
- Black Swan Energy Ltd.,
- Frontier Oil Ltd. and Planet Gas Ltd Clean Rock Renewable Energy Resources Corp.
- Monte Oro Resources Energy, Inc.
Mr. Layug said the department will put a premium on bidders  with more aggressive work programs for the potential exploration site.
The government is expecting $7.5 billion in investments  from the contracting round.
The coal contracting round offered 38 exploration areas  with about 28 sites receiving bids from investors. Due to the interest in oil  and gas exploration in the country, Mr. Layug said there have been several  seismic firms that have approached the government to offer surveying services.
"We noticed that the areas that did not that did not  get any bids were areas that did not have that much data. After the offering  round, we were approached by several firms who want to conduct seismic  surveys," said Mr. Layug.
The department however would not disclose which firms  approached them.
Mr. Layug said the government does not have the capability  to conduct many of the seismic surveys needed for oil exploration.
Energy Undersecretary Jose M. Layug Jr. said that once  completed, the group will be able to make its recommendations to the energy  secretary as to which party or company should be awarded a petroleum service  contract.
According to Layug, the 13 offers being processed now  included the nine submissions that were accepted during the opening of the bids  last April, and the four other offers, which were initially rejected by the DoE  but later reconsidered.
The move to fast-track the processing of the bid offers,  which were opened only last April, was meant to hasten the development of local  indigenous resources, cut costly oil imports and help ensure the country's  energy security over the long term.
The last time that the DoE had awarded a petroleum service  contract was in April 2009, to UK-based Pitkin Petroleum Ltd. and South China  Resources Inc., for Service Contract 71, which covered 1.16 million hectares  within the Mindoro-Cuyo basin.
Layug remained hopeful that the DoE would receive more  offers from big foreign exploration players when the Philippine government  auctions off Areas 3,4 and 5, all located within northwest Palawan, by  end-July.
The northwest Palawan basin is reportedly one of the most  prolific oil and gas basins in the Philippines and is home to the country's  most successful natural gas project, the $4.5-billion Malampaya gas field.
Currently, production within this basin alone had reached  roughly 58 million barrels of oil, 800 billion cubic feet of gas and 40 million  barrels of condensate.
It is estimated that the basin has further resource  potential of 400 million barrels of oil and 2.200 trillion cubic feet of gas.

