Indonesia has officially demanded $2.4 billion in compensation from a Thai oil company for damages related to a spill off the northwestern coast of Australia last year, a minister said Tuesday.
Transportation Minister Freddy Numberi said the claim for Rp 22 trillion rupiah had been presented during talks with PTT Australasia, a unit of Thailand’s PTT Exploration and Production PCL, in Australia last week.
“Our calculation includes potential damage to the coral reef in the affected area,” Numberi was quoted as saying by Dow Jones Newswires.
The minister is leading a government team in negotiations with the Thai company, which has asked for detailed scientific evidence to back up Indonesia’s claims.
“PTTEP has ... joined hands with Australian authorities concerned to closely follow the environmental situation,” the company said in a statement Friday, adding that the spill was limited to an area around its damaged Montara well.
“The result of these studies will be released to the public when completed.”
The leak in the Timor Sea from August 21 to November 3 was the worst from an offshore oil platform in Australian history, although it was smaller than the recent BP spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
Like the BP spill, it dragged on for months as the company tried to plug the flow with a relief well, a process that eventually succeeded.
It also led to calls for tougher regulation of offshore drilling and criticism of the authorities responsible for monitoring the operation.
Evidence given at a commission of inquiry showed the Montara slick grew to almost 90,000 square kilometers and entered Indonesian waters, according to environmental group WWF.
The West Timor Care Foundation, which supports poor fishermen in eastern Indonesia, estimates the spill affected the livelihoods of about 18,000 fishermen. Businesses such as seaweed and pearl farms were also reportedly hit.
Following this year’s Gulf of Mexico spill, which was the biggest maritime spill on record and spewed some 4.9 million barrels of oil, BP set up a 20-billion-dollar compensation fund.
“Our calculation includes potential damage to the coral reef in the affected area,” Numberi was quoted as saying by Dow Jones Newswires.
The minister is leading a government team in negotiations with the Thai company, which has asked for detailed scientific evidence to back up Indonesia’s claims.
“PTTEP has ... joined hands with Australian authorities concerned to closely follow the environmental situation,” the company said in a statement Friday, adding that the spill was limited to an area around its damaged Montara well.
“The result of these studies will be released to the public when completed.”
The leak in the Timor Sea from August 21 to November 3 was the worst from an offshore oil platform in Australian history, although it was smaller than the recent BP spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
Like the BP spill, it dragged on for months as the company tried to plug the flow with a relief well, a process that eventually succeeded.
It also led to calls for tougher regulation of offshore drilling and criticism of the authorities responsible for monitoring the operation.
Evidence given at a commission of inquiry showed the Montara slick grew to almost 90,000 square kilometers and entered Indonesian waters, according to environmental group WWF.
The West Timor Care Foundation, which supports poor fishermen in eastern Indonesia, estimates the spill affected the livelihoods of about 18,000 fishermen. Businesses such as seaweed and pearl farms were also reportedly hit.
Following this year’s Gulf of Mexico spill, which was the biggest maritime spill on record and spewed some 4.9 million barrels of oil, BP set up a 20-billion-dollar compensation fund.