KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) – The board and management of Malaysian national energy giant Petronas have urged the prime minister to drop a planned tax settlement with a state run by his political allies, three sources close to the company said.
Petronas rejected the Reuters report in a statement late on Friday and said it remained committed to working closely with Sarawak state and its stakeholders to reach the best outcome on the matter.
Petronas’ chief executive, Wan Zulkiflee Wan Ariffin, resigned in opposition to the deal, sources told Reuters last week, and he is set to leave the company this month after 37 years.
But sources told Reuters the rest of the management were still trying to convince Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin to block the pay-out to Sarawak, a resource-rich state on Borneo island.
Muhyiddin’s decision will have big implications for Petronas and the national budget, and will be closely watched by foreign investors, on guard over corporate governance and financial transparency in Malaysia following a huge scandal at sovereign fund 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB).
“The Petronas board and management are totally against the deal. Management is drawing up fresh representation for the PM in a bid to convince him to see things their way,” said one source.
Another said Petronas executives recently briefed Muhyiddin, telling him the deal was not viable and would set a bad precedent, but he refused to budge.
Petronas said the “alleged conflict” between the company and the prime minister was speculative.
“Petronas, in collaboration with its shareholder, is currently in the midst of negotiations with the Sarawak state government to achieve appropriate commercial resolution,” it said.
The prime minister’s office did not respond to requests for comment.
At the centre of the disagreement is Sarawak’s demand for a sales tax payment, which went to the courts last year, before Muhyiddin took office on March 1. Petronas, which already pays federal taxes, had filed a challenge to the tax claim, questioning Sarawak’s right to impose such a tax.
A court ruled that Sarawak can impose the tax, but Petronas had appealed that decision at the federal court.
A $470 million settlement was announced last month, although Sarawak later said it was still pursuing the case, with state officials saying Sarawak was now seeking nearly $680 million.
Petronas also this week filed to withdraw the federal court appeal, though sources close to Petronas said the board did not want to end the legal fight with Sarawak.
“The decision is out of Petronas’ hands. It’s being driven by the prime minister,” said one source.
By law, the prime minister has the final say on matters involving wholly state-owned Petronas, the world’s fourth biggest liquefied natural gas exporter and Malaysia’s only Fortune 500 company. It had revenue of $56 billion last year.
Previous Malaysian governments have held out against demands from energy rich states for a bigger share of oil and gas revenues.
But Muhyiddin needs support from Sarawak state’s political bloc – Gabungan Parti Sarawak – to assure his single-digit majority in parliament, as he remains in a shaky position nearly four months after emerging as prime minister following the shock resignation of Mahathir Mohamad.
Mahathir had opposed giving more oil money to the states.
And the Petronas board and management are concerned that the settlement with Sarawak would encourage other oil and gas rich states to make similar demands, the sources said.
In addition to paying the sales tax, sources close to the negotiations have earlier said Muhyiddin had shown he was potentially open to increasing royalty payments to Sarawak and Sabah states – which could run into billions of dollars a year.
(Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Louise Heavens)