| Marathon Subsidiary and  BPMIGAS Sign Memorandum of  Understanding for Long Term  Supply of LNG From Indonesia to Tijuana Regional Energy Center biz.yahoo.com
 
 Thursday July 24, 1:35 pm ET
 
 HOUSTON, July 24 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Marathon Oil
 Corporation (NYSE: MRO - News) and its joint development
 partners in the Tijuana Regional Energy Center project, Grupo
 GGS, S.A. de C.V.  and Golar LNG Limited, announced today that
 Marathon subsidiary GNBC VENTAS, S. de R.L. de C.V. (GNBC)
 has signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with
 BPMIGAS, the government regulator of Indonesian upstream oil
 and gas activities, under which BPMIGAS would coordinate the
 negotiation of liquefied natural gas (LNG) supply agreements to
 provide GNBC with between three and six million metric tonnes
 of LNG per year for a period of 20 years.
 
 The LNG would be shipped
 to the proposed Tijuana
 Regional Energy Center
 being developed by Marathon
 and its project partners near
 Tijuana, Baja California,
 Mexico. The MOU could lead
 to the execution of one or
 more definitive LNG
 purchase and sale
 agreements.
 
 LNG supply sources could
 include the existing liquefaction plant at Bontang, East
 Kalimantan, or planned liquefaction projects in Irian Jaya or
 Sulawesi and would be subject to the ongoing negotiations with
 production sharing contract holders, with support and approval of
 BPMIGAS.
 
 "We are very pleased to have entered into this important MOU
 with BPMIGAS," said John S. Hattenberger, senior vice president
 of Marathon International Petroleum, Ltd. "Indonesia has the
 potential to be a significant supplier of LNG to the Tijuana
 Regional Energy Center and we look forward to finalizing the
 necessary agreements that will serve as the basis for a
 long-term, mutually beneficial relationship."
 
 Announced in 2002, the proposed Tijuana Regional Energy
 Center is an integrated complex that will consist of an LNG
 offloading terminal and a 750 million cubic feet per day
 regasification plant, a 1,200-megawatt power generation plant to
 supply regional electricity needs, a 20-million gallon per day
 seawater desalination plant to provide fresh water for the city of
 Tijuana, wastewater treatment facilities to augment existing
 processing capacity of the San Antonio de Los Buenos treatment
 plant, and related natural gas pipeline infrastructure.
 
 Currently, GNBC and its affiliates are proceeding with necessary
 regulatory reviews and permits as required by federal and local
 authorities in Mexico. Assuming timely regulatory approvals and
 execution of successful commercial and financing plans,
 construction of the Tijuana Regional Energy Center would begin
 in early 2004, with start up expected in late 2006 or early 2007.
 
 This release contains forward-looking statements concerning the
 expected execution of LNG purchase and sale agreements and
 the planned construction of LNG re-gasification, power
 generation and related facilities. This forward- looking information
 may prove to be inaccurate and actual results may differ
 significantly from those presently anticipated. Factors but not
 necessarily all factors that could adversely affect these expected
 results include, unforeseen difficulty in negotiation of definitive
 LNG supply agreements, definitive agreements among project
 participants, identification of additional participants to reach
 optimum levels of participation, inability or delay in obtaining
 necessary government and third party approvals, arranging
 sufficient project financing, unanticipated changes in market
 demand or supply, competition with similar projects,
 environmental and permitting issues, availability or construction
 of sufficient LNG vessels, and unforeseen hazards such as
 weather conditions. In accordance with "safe harbor" provisions
 of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Marathon
 Oil Corporation has included in its Annual Report on Form 10-K
 for the year ended December 31, 2002, and in subsequent
 Forms 10-Q and 8-K, cautionary language identifying other
 important factors, though not necessarily all such factors, that
 could cause future outcomes to differ materially from those set
 forth in the forward-looking statements.
 
 Source: Marathon Oil Corporation
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