The Prague Post - Gas giants' Myanmar exit unlikely to badly damage junta: analysts

EUR -
AED 4.322681
AFN 81.204858
ALL 96.9758
AMD 450.888195
ANG 2.107097
AOA 1079.203156
ARS 1724.967861
AUD 1.764853
AWG 2.118392
AZN 2.000265
BAM 1.957778
BBD 2.369494
BDT 143.203483
BGN 1.955952
BHD 0.443722
BIF 3465.923924
BMD 1.176884
BND 1.507723
BOB 8.147232
BRL 6.259609
BSD 1.176489
BTN 103.68677
BWP 16.619794
BYN 3.983625
BYR 23066.930022
BZD 2.366091
CAD 1.621241
CDF 3363.534708
CHF 0.935155
CLF 0.028554
CLP 1120.181385
CNY 8.378262
CNH 8.377526
COP 4598.08651
CRC 592.598793
CUC 1.176884
CUP 31.187431
CVE 110.891943
CZK 24.343611
DJF 209.15562
DKK 7.468819
DOP 74.084431
DZD 152.561081
EGP 56.667684
ERN 17.653263
ETB 169.34388
FJD 2.630575
FKP 0.86852
GBP 0.865483
GEL 3.168828
GGP 0.86852
GHS 14.392923
GIP 0.86852
GMD 82.96423
GNF 10191.816542
GTQ 9.018112
GYD 246.138711
HKD 9.156365
HNL 30.787462
HRK 7.542178
HTG 153.945555
HUF 390.672576
IDR 19268.065562
ILS 3.943198
IMP 0.86852
INR 103.729513
IQD 1541.718282
IRR 49487.979871
ISK 143.2735
JEP 0.86852
JMD 188.950926
JOD 0.834427
JPY 173.396178
KES 152.409687
KGS 102.918373
KHR 4715.775365
KMF 492.526524
KPW 1059.200097
KRW 1630.196158
KWD 0.359422
KYD 0.980391
KZT 635.812458
LAK 25503.080647
LBP 105389.978677
LKR 355.359073
LRD 209.691366
LSL 20.418876
LTL 3.475033
LVL 0.711886
LYD 6.349343
MAD 10.566949
MDL 19.570775
MGA 5266.556692
MKD 61.602246
MMK 2471.007335
MNT 4230.682842
MOP 9.426425
MRU 46.987085
MUR 53.536497
MVR 18.001785
MWK 2044.248202
MXN 21.634721
MYR 4.950558
MZN 75.200511
NAD 20.431057
NGN 1764.383487
NIO 43.203507
NOK 11.564882
NPR 165.898633
NZD 1.974253
OMR 0.452517
PAB 1.176489
PEN 4.110266
PGK 4.915253
PHP 67.229522
PKR 331.234227
PLN 4.252259
PYG 8399.487278
QAR 4.284741
RON 5.06543
RSD 117.222382
RUB 97.633036
RWF 1701.774531
SAR 4.414428
SBD 9.670476
SCR 16.809449
SDG 707.884291
SEK 10.913941
SGD 1.506882
SHP 0.924846
SLE 27.450843
SLL 24678.677226
SOS 672.58752
SRD 46.063838
STD 24359.126506
STN 24.949945
SVC 10.294314
SYP 15301.617886
SZL 20.419301
THB 37.401514
TJS 11.12354
TMT 4.119095
TND 3.409404
TOP 2.756379
TRY 48.618738
TTD 7.985069
TWD 35.552849
TZS 2907.730133
UAH 48.473568
UGX 4123.166261
USD 1.176884
UYU 47.21731
UZS 14569.826051
VES 188.592601
VND 31052.089216
VUV 140.724832
WST 3.234022
XAF 656.620483
XAG 0.027566
XAU 0.00032
XCD 3.180589
XCG 2.120343
XDR 0.818282
XOF 656.112756
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.979814
ZAR 20.432551
ZMK 10593.363395
ZMW 27.794085
ZWL 378.956227
  • RBGPF

    -1.2700

    76

    -1.67%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.32

    -0.16%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    11.81

    -0.34%

  • NGG

    0.0200

    71.62

    +0.03%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    15.64

    +1.41%

  • RELX

    0.3600

    46.86

    +0.77%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    40.3

    -1.32%

  • AZN

    -1.5100

    78.05

    -1.93%

  • BTI

    -0.5600

    56.03

    -1%

  • BP

    0.3200

    34.21

    +0.94%

  • RIO

    1.2800

    63.72

    +2.01%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    24.45

    +0.2%

  • BCC

    -0.5600

    85.12

    -0.66%

  • JRI

    -0.0365

    14.06

    -0.26%

  • SCS

    0.0600

    16.87

    +0.36%

  • BCE

    -0.4700

    23.69

    -1.98%

Gas giants' Myanmar exit unlikely to badly damage junta: analysts
Gas giants' Myanmar exit unlikely to badly damage junta: analysts

Gas giants' Myanmar exit unlikely to badly damage junta: analysts

The exit of energy titans TotalEnergies and Chevron from Myanmar's billion dollar gas industry has been hailed by rights groups, but analysts say it will not significantly weaken the generals and may even enrich the military in the short term.

Text size:

Both firms had faced pressure to cut financial links with the junta that toppled Aung San Suu Kyi's government last year and has since killed more than 1,400 people in a crackdown on dissent, according to a monitoring group.

The French firm and US oil major Chevron will withdraw from the Yadana gas field in the Andaman Sea, which provides electricity to the local Burmese and Thai population.

Myanmar's gas industry -- which Human Rights Watch says generates $1 billion a year -- has so far evaded swingeing sanctions imposed by the United States and EU on lucrative military-owned timber and jade enterprises.

Friday's "announcement is certainly significant," Manny Maung, Myanmar researcher at Human Rights Watch told AFP.

"But there is a lot more pressure needed to defeat this junta for good.

"Governments no longer have an excuse to delay imposing targeted sanctions on oil and gas entities... to prevent any other unscrupulous entities from entering the market."

TotalEnergies and Chevron's departure will deprive the junta of hundreds of millions of dollars a year in foreign revenue as the economy it presides over tanks from months of unrest and a mass walkout.

TotalEnergies alone paid around $176 million to Myanmar authorities in 2020 in the form of taxes and "production rights", according to the company's own financial statements.

Naw Susanna Hla Hla Soe, a minister in a shadow government dominated by lawmakers from Suu Kyi's party which is working to topple the military said the news sent a "very strong message" to the junta.

"Other companies must follow Total's example to put even more pressure on the generals," she added.

- 'No confidence' -

If the French and American titans were willing -- belatedly -- to bow to rights groups and activist pressure, there are others with fewer qualms about making money in junta-run Myanmar.

"It will be harder to force the hand of Asian investors because their human rights commitments and the stakeholder pressures on them are lower," Dr Htwe Htwe Thein at Curtin University in Australia, told AFP.

Others say it is possible the junta will profit short-term from any change in ownership.

The withdrawal of TotalEnergies is "a big vote of no confidence in the regime", International Crisis Group's Myanmar senior advisor Richard Horsey told AFP.

But the junta would likely be able to "sell the departing operators' stakes", he added -- which would inject much needed hard currency into the state coffers.

The military would also be able to "attract and negotiate favourable terms and signature payments from operators in jurisdictions beyond the scope of Western sanctions".

TotalEnergies will not exit immediately -- it said in a statement it will continue to operate the site for the next six months at the latest until its contractual period ends.

"As things stand... Means likely cash windfall for the regime unless ways are found to prevent that, which must be priority," Horsey said on Twitter.

And the generals' economic portfolio stretches far beyond gas, and includes interests in mines, banks, agriculture and tourism, providing the military with a colossal -- and closely guarded -- fortune.

The jade industry alone -- dominated by military-owned business -- provides the military with billions of dollars a year in off-the-books revenue, analysts say.

There also remains the question of how easy TotalEnergies and Chevron will find it to exit junta-ruled Myanmar, said Htwe Htwe Thein, citing Norway's Telenor, which announced it was withdrawing in July, but whose exit has been held up by the military.

"Total may suffer the same fate," she said.

E.Soukup--TPP