Philippines says it will defend oil search in disputed seas

Philippines says it will defend oil search in disputed seas

SeattlePI.com

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MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The Philippines is ready to defend the oil and gas exploration it has decided to resume in its internationally recognized waters in the disputed South China Sea and will not cede that right to any nation, the energy chief said Friday.

The Department of Energy announced Thursday that President Rodrigo Duterte has approved its recommendation to lift a 6-year-old moratorium on energy exploration in three offshore areas west of the Philippines, including in potentially oil- and gas-rich Reed Bank, which China also claims.

Companies with government exploration contracts have been notified to resume their petroleum search, Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said.

Cusi told reporters in an online news conference Friday that China was not informed of the Philippine government’s decision to resume oil exploration in its exclusive economic zone, a 200-mile (320-kilometer) stretch of waters where a coastal state can exclusively exploit maritime resources under the 1982 U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea.

Reed Bank and two other exploration areas are within the Philippines’ exclusive zone but China is likely assert its claim, Cusi said. “They will not just take it without raising a word. I’m sure they’re going to write us,” he said.

Asked how the Philippines will respond if China protests or intervenes in the high-seas exploration, Cusi replied, “We have to stand up for our rights, that’s what we are going to do.”

Exploration companies have been assured they will be protected by a 500-meter (1,650-foot) security buffer zone, Cusi said, without elaborating. He said he expected “China will be respecting that.”

In 2011, a Philippine exploration vessel reported it was being harassed by two Chinese patrol boats at Reed Bank, prompting...

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