“This activity was also critical to preparing our facilities for the next phase of indigenous gas production so that homes, businesses and industries continue to benefit from a reliable domestic energy source,” she added.
The turnaround covered the Shallow Water Platform off northwest Palawan and the Onshore Gas Plant in Tabangao, Batangas City, where hundreds of engineers, technicians, offshore specialists, marine crews and contractors carried out maintenance, inspection and engineering work on offshore facilities, subsea infrastructure and onshore systems.
Campaign safely finished
Prime Energy said the campaign was completed safely and gas production resumed on schedule despite weather-related challenges.
The company also coordinated the planned outage with the Department of Energy, the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines and its power generation customers to ensure alternative fuel arrangements were in place while Malampaya was offline.
For more than two decades, Malampaya has supplied indigenous natural gas to power plants in Batangas, providing a key source of fuel for the Luzon grid while helping reduce the country’s dependence on imported fuels.
The Phase 4 expansion is expected to sustain that role by unlocking fresh gas from the Malampaya East-1 and Camago-3 wells.