Discovered in 1992, done in 2026
by Phoenix l Published April 14, 2026

Malampaya was discovered in 1992. Yes, 1992. Yet it has taken more than three decades for the worldâor even the average Filipinoâto hear about Phase 4 development, projected to deliver gas by the fourth quarter of 2026. Three decades. Thatâs how long it can take for something critical, nationally significant, and revenue-generating to finally matterâdepending entirely on which administration happens to hold the reins of power. Itâs not about technology, capability, or even necessity. Itâs all about political timing, priorities, and agendas.
The Camago-3 well, drilled off Palawan, flows at up to 60 million standard cubic feet of gas per day. It effectively doubles the volume of Malampayaâs remaining reserves, extends the fieldâs life by six years, and offers cheaper fuel than imported liquefied natural gas. The project has been certified a Project of National Significance and has generated more than $14 billion in revenue for the Philippine government. Yet for decades, this potential lay dormantâbecause the right administration hadnât decided it was important enough.
Itâs tempting to say this is just bureaucracy at work. But consider: governments can push massive projects when it suits them. Malampaya Phase 4 has subsea pipelines, private operators, joint venture partners, and security measures in contested waters of the West Philippine Sea. Billions of pesos flow. Deadlines are enforced. Risks are calculated. If the administration wants it done, it gets done. Itâs obvious: priority is political, not technical.
Meanwhile, critical decisions languish because no administration has framed them as profitable, headline-worthy, or urgent. Energy independence, infrastructure modernization, environmental reformâthese could have been tackled decades ago, yet they remain postponed, debated, and delayed. If the discovery of gas had depended on âurgencyâ alone, Filipinos would have benefited long before today. Instead, it depended on which leaders saw value in it.
Even the West Philippine Sea factor couldnât stop Malampaya. Security protocols, coastguard presence, and territorial management have all been organized to continue development despite geopolitical tension with China. Yet other projects, sometimes less controversial, languish because the political calculus doesnât favor them. The story repeats itself across policy: if the administration doesnât care, progress stalls.
We must ask ourselves what this means for energy policy, economic planning, and national security. Malampayaâs decades-long dormancy is a warning: our most critical resources are not fully leveraged until someone in power decides itâs convenient, profitable, or politically advantageous. Citizens and the environment pay the price for this selective urgency.
So yes, Malampaya will deliver gas, revenue, and at least some relief from global oil price spikesâbut only now, because the stars of political timing finally aligned. The real question isnât how much gas we have or how much revenue we generateâitâs why it took three decades to matter.
Any projects, reform, and national priorities are not about the countryâtheyâre about the administration in power. And if we continue letting political timing dictate progress, one has to ask: how many more decades will we wait for what should have been done yesterday?
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