Petronas - Petros ruling deferred as Sarawak gas row tests the limits of Federal power

LocalPolitics
30 Jan 2026 • 12:45 PM MYT
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THE Kuching High Court’s decision to postpone its ruling in the legal contest between Petroliam Nasional Bhd (PETRONAS) and Petroleum Sarawak Bhd (PETROS) has extended uncertainty over a dispute that has come to symbolise the wider struggle between federal authority and state autonomy in Malaysia’s oil and gas sector.

The court has now fixed Feb 25 for its decision, according to PETRONAS’ counsel Alex Ngu, delaying a judgment that had been expected today.

While adjournments are procedurally routine, the timing is politically and commercially charged, as both Putrajaya and Kuching await judicial clarity on who ultimately regulates gas distribution in Sarawak.

On the surface, the case concerns a claim for RM7.95 million.

That sum was paid by PETROS to PETRONAS after the national oil company called on a bank guarantee in October 2024, following PETROS’ refusal to pay for gas supplied two months earlier.

Yet the financial dispute masks a far more consequential question about jurisdiction and control.

PETROS has argued that PETRONAS’ call on the guarantee was unlawful, maintaining that the national oil company lacks the licence required under Sarawak’s Distribution of Gas Ordinance 2016 to supply gas in the state.

The argument reflects Sarawak’s broader assertion that state legislation governs downstream gas activities within its borders, reinforcing long-standing demands for greater autonomy over natural resources.

PETRONAS, however, has stood firm on the position that the gas was supplied and accepted, and that federal law continues to govern petroleum activities nationwide.

Implicit in its stance is the view that state-level regulations cannot override the authority conferred on the national oil company under federal legislation.

The stakes therefore extend well beyond the immediate claim.

The court’s ruling is widely expected to clarify whether state or federal laws take precedence in regulating gas distribution in Sarawak, an issue that has remained unresolved amid overlapping legal frameworks and increasingly assertive political rhetoric.

Whatever the outcome, the decision is likely to influence future commercial arrangements between PETRONAS and PETROS, shaping how gas is supplied, priced and regulated.

More significantly, it may recalibrate the balance of power between the federal government and resource-rich states, setting a precedent that could reverberate across Malaysia’s energy landscape.

Until the court delivers its judgment next month, that balance remains in limbo, leaving both companies, and the wider industry, navigating an uneasy space where legal uncertainty and political tension intersect. - January 30, 2026