Malaysia's Petronas and Japan's Mitsubishi Corp. are divesting their stakes in Myanmar's Yetagun gas field, the companies said, in the latest exits by major energy companies from the country since last year's military coup.
A spokesperson from Mitsubishi said on Friday it would be difficult to continue the business from technical and economic points of view.
The company, which indirectly holds a 1.93% stake in the Yetagun gas field off the southern coast of Myanmar, has decided to quit the project and is in talks with other partners in its joint venture JX Myanmar, he added.
Petronas said earlier this month that its subsidiary, PC Myanmar (Hong Kong) Ltd., operator of Yetagun field, had signed agreements for the sale of its entities related to Petronas' upstream operations in Myanmar in July last year.
A Petronas spokesperson said the transaction was pending completion and declined to identify the buyer.
PC Myanmar (Hong Kong) holds a 40.9% stake in Yetagun, while Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise owns 20.5%.
A Japanese consortium, led by the Japanese government and JX Nippon Oil & Gas Exploration, a unit of oil refinery Eneos Holdings, has a 19.3% stake while the remainder is owned by PTTEP International Ltd.
"Eneos is looking at various possibilities with its business partners," a company spokesperson said when asked whether it planned to continue the gas project in Myanmar.
Last month, TotalEnergies and Chevron Corp., partners in a major gas project in Myanmar, said they were withdrawing from the country, citing the worsening humanitarian situation following last year's coup.
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