Fuel Plan Walked Back: Jubahib Clarifies ‘Exploratory’ Deal After Petronas Denial

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Screenshot: One DavNor Network

DAVAO CITY (April 1)  — What was presented as a bold provincial response to rising fuel costs is now being recast as preliminary talk, after a public denial from Malaysia’s state oil giant exposed gaps in the plan.

Davao del Norte Governor Edwin Jubahib on Tuesday said he had no direct communication with Petronas regarding the proposed purchase of 44 million liters of fuel—days after the firm flatly denied any involvement.

The clarification follows Petronas’ March 29 statement distancing itself from the deal, saying it was “not aware of, nor involved in, any such arrangement.”

From announcement to ambiguity

On May 25, Jubahib announced plans to source fuel from Malaysia, framing it as a proactive move to shield the province from surging oil prices driven by tensions in the Middle East.

But with no confirmed supplier and no formal agreement, the governor now describes the initiative as “exploratory”—a significant shift from the earlier tone of certainty.

“My statement… was clear—it is exploratory,” Jubahib said, adding that negotiations “may or may not prosper.”

The gap between announcement and reality raises questions about how far the proposal had progressed before it was made public—and whether it created false expectations of relief for local consumers.

Local initiative, national limits

Jubahib defended the move as a response to urgent economic pressures, citing fears of an “impending economic catastrophe” if fuel prices continue to rise.

But the episode also underscores the limits of local governments in navigating international energy deals, a space typically governed by national agencies like the Department of Energy.

While the governor said any eventual agreement would follow proper channels—whether government-to-government or through private firms—the absence of coordination at the outset appears to have undercut the initiative’s credibility.

Optics vs. operational reality

The controversy highlights a recurring tension in crisis governance: the pressure to act quickly versus the complexity of executing large-scale solutions.

A 44-million-liter fuel deal is not a routine procurement—it involves international suppliers, regulatory approvals, logistics, and financing structures that go beyond provincial authority.

Without these in place, the announcement risks being seen less as a concrete plan and more as a political signal—projecting action in the face of rising costs.

Real crisis, uncertain solutions

The underlying problem remains real. Fuel prices continue to fluctuate amid global instability, affecting transport, food supply, and household expenses across Mindanao.

But the path to relief is far from straightforward.

Jubahib pointed to existing ties with Malaysian officials as a basis for the initiative, though details remain unclear. Petronas, for its part, emphasized its focus on domestic supply stability—suggesting limited room for external commitments.

A cautionary episode

The incident leaves behind a cautionary lesson: in a volatile energy market, announcements can move faster than agreements.

For local governments, the challenge is not just to respond to economic pressure—but to ensure that responses are grounded in viable, coordinated plans.

For now, the proposed fuel deal remains just that—a proposal.

And for consumers waiting for relief, the gap between promise and delivery is becoming harder to ignore.

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