Sarawak’s energy feud with Petronas gives Malaysia’s Anwar a legal headache
Sarawak state is challenging oil giant Petronas’ dominance in the highest court, in a test for the prime minister’s unity coalition

The filing deepens a stand-off between the government-controlled energy company and the resource-rich state on Borneo island over offshore petroleum, raising questions about whether a political settlement brokered last year has already unravelled.
Sarawak holds more than 60 per cent of Malaysia’s natural gas and sits at the heart of the country’s energy plans. Petronas, meanwhile, is a cornerstone of federal revenues.
This is a fight not only over money, but also state sovereignty and the constitutional bargains that have held Malaysia together since 1963, when Malaya, Sabah, Sarawak and – briefly – Singapore formed the federation under that year’s Malaysia Agreement.
Petros vs Petronas
The three statutes Sarawak has in its sights – the Petroleum Development Act 1974, the Continental Shelf Act 1966 and the Petroleum Mining Act 1966 – form the federal legal framework under which Petronas has long claimed ultimate authority over the country’s petroleum resources, including those off Sarawak’s northwest coast.