For decades, the Philippines approached energy security largely through the logic of globalization: import what is needed, rely on international markets, and trust that supply chains would remain stable. That model worked in an era where geopolitical disruptions were episodic and maritime trade routes were largely predictable.
This era is ending.
The ongoing US-Israel-Iran conflict has exposed how vulnerable heavily import-dependent economies are to oil shocks, freight disruptions, and supply uncertainty. Yet the deeper issue is not merely the current war. It is the realization that future disruptions —whether in the Middle East, the South China Sea, or around Taiwan — may no longer be rare exceptions but recurring features of the global economy.
The question facing us is no longer whether we pursue strategic energy infrastructure, rather if we can afford not to.
Critics argue that investing in terminal storage, refining, and trading infrastructure may be ill-timed given the rise of renewables and EVs. Understandably, the world is transitioning toward cleaner energy. But transitions unfold over decades, while disruptions occur overnight. Even optimistic forecasts show oil and gas remaining critical to transport, aviation, shipping, manufacturing, and petrochemicals for decades to come.
We remain one of Asia’s most exposed energy importers, with limited reserves and storage capacity, and a heavy reliance on foreign refining systems. In effect, the country operates close to a “just-in-time” import model — efficient in peacetime, but dangerously fragile during geopolitical stress.
This is why the concept of a strategic terminal storage and refinery program deserves serious consideration as part of a broader national security strategy.
The stronger case emerges if such a project is structured not as a purely government-funded undertaking, but through a properly designed joint venture, Build-Operate-Transfer, or Design-Build-Finance-Operate-Transfer arrangement.
Under such a framework, government would primarily provide land access, regulatory support, and ease-of-doing-business reforms, while foreign investors would shoulder the capital expenditure, technology, operational expertise, and commercial risk.
That distinction matters enormously.
If a credible foreign investor proposes to establish not merely a refinery but a multi-use strategic energy hub — integrating storage, refining, LNG capability, petrochemicals, bunkering, and regional distribution — the project ceases to be simply a domestic fuel initiative. It becomes a geopolitical and commercial platform.
The Philippines sits at one of the world’s most strategic maritime crossroads. Positioned between Northeast Asia and the Indian Ocean trade routes, it possesses the geographic potential to evolve into a regional energy transshipment and trading center. A well-designed hub could distribute products not only domestically but across parts of Asia, including large markets like India and China.
Such a hub could eventually support the development of an Asian energy trading platform that mirrors, complements, and partially rivals benchmarks associated with Dubai and Singapore.
Today, much of Asia still relies on pricing and trading mechanisms centered outside its own emerging growth corridors. The Philippines has an opportunity — if it moves early and strategically — to participate more actively in regional energy pricing, storage arbitrage, and distribution logistics.
Countries throughout Asia and the Middle East built strategic energy relevance not solely because they possessed natural resources, but because they invested in infrastructure, logistics, storage and trading ecosystems. Geography alone is not destiny; geography combined with infrastructure becomes leverage.
Notably, there are pending PPP and unsolicited energy infrastructure proposals already submitted to the government involving strategic storage, terminal, and refinery concepts. These proposals deserve serious and urgent evaluation. The government need not automatically approve them, nor should it bypass environmental, financial, or national security scrutiny. But it should undertake due diligence post-haste.
In an environment where credible investors remain willing — indeed eager — to commit billions of dollars into long-horizon Philippine infrastructure despite global uncertainty, bureaucratic paralysis becomes a strategic risk.
Opportunities of this scale and timing rarely remain open indefinitely.