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Saturday, August 24, 2013

Myanmar: A Blueprint for International Development?

I was never a good footballer. Besides an innate lack of ability, there was another reason for my ineptitude: The best footballers don’t chase madly after the ball as I did. They anticipate where the ball is going and move there. So it should be with international development.

Much is being made of the reopening of Myanmar to the global economy. Barely a week goes by without another multinational announcing a commitment to invest in the country. At the World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting last month, Coca-Cola (KO) Chief Executive Officer Muhtar Kent compared the opening of the company’s first Myanmar bottling facility to the fall of the Berlin Wall. That’s a grand vision. But really, what does all this economic development mean for a country with a population of 60 million mostly rural people, 76 percent of whom lack access to electricity and more than 90 percent of whom lack access to a mobile phone?

From a development perspective, Myanmar may be a blank canvas, but the brushes are digital. Myanmar has the potential to go beyond all the traditional emerging-market development models. Where once public-private partnerships (PPPs) were cutting edge, we now need to consider other, newer models, too. What, for example, are the appropriate roles of PPPs? As its economy reopens to large multinationals, now could be the perfect time to find out, and the country could become a blueprint for a new kind of international development.

Development efforts in Myanmar and other emerging-market economies have typically focused on leapfrogging, a term that conjures up an image of accelerated progress. Taken literally, though, leapfrog is just another playground game characterized by repetitive activity that leads to incremental change. To realize its promise as a development hub for global companies, however, Myanmar must strive for transformational change.

Myanmar and those investing in the country need to think big. Why focus on building an ATM network in Myanmar—an idea raised at one WEF summit discussion—rather than advancing directly to creating the ability to dispense mobile money?  What long-term value can be gained by investing in old technology?

A much better idea for Myanmar is the development of a mobile network. In June the government awarded two major contracts for developing such a network. As the project takes shape, the successful bidders should give serious thought to rural off-grid electrification, which creates both business and development challenges and opportunities. Successful rural electrification can help transform agriculture by providing mobile-enabled services such as microfinance, crop insurance, or weather information. Additionally, electrification and mobile connectivity can significantly improve the prospects for developing a next-generation health system.

Addressing the health-care challenge need not be confined solely to health-care companies. Since Coca-Cola and PepsiCo (PEP) have ambitions in Myanmar, what role might they play in transforming health distribution systems for essential medicines by bringing their supply-chain expertise to bear? And in education, how might the growing financial-services community turn the economic potential of Myanmar’s talent into an “asset class” for investment today?

To be clear, this is not about ignoring the critical role of government; it’s about changing it from acting as a “service deliverer” to a “choreographer” across a diverse set of partners and stakeholders.

Myanmar is a rich country filled with poor people who have high hopes. Meeting their expectations will require a new approach to economic development: namely a strategy for footballers—not leapfroggers—that can successfully marry the best of the old with the best of the new.

Lower House signs off on $100m loan from Chinese bank

Burma’s lower house of parliament on Thursday agreed to borrow US$ 100 million dollar from the Export-Import Bank of China that will be used to fund cooperatives across Burma.
During Thursday’s lower house session, the cooperatives minister along with the minister of commerce presented the plan to MPs.
Speaking to DVB on Thursday, Lower House MP Phe Than said the house agreed to borrow the money and called on the Ministry of Cooperatives to present a detailed plan on how they will use the loans to the parliament.
According to Lower House MP Phyo Min Thein, the Ministry of Commerce will be tasked with borrowing the sum, while the Ministry of Cooperatives will then implement a plan that will distribute small grants.
“Nearly $700 million dollars will be borrowed from the bank. As a first step, $ 100 million will be borrowed. The interest rate is high at 4.5 percent and the service fee is one percent,” said Phyo Min Thein.
“We should take risks because of the high interest and service rate. It is good if it benefits the people. But, practically speaking, the benefits to people will be considerable,” he said.
                              By ;DVB

Myanmar is new battleground for business

Indian companies seek to wrest business from Chinese firms in the world's 'next economic frontier'

Mumbai (Business Times (subscription)

MYANMAR, called Asia's "next economic frontier" by the International Monetary Fund, is the new battleground for Indian companies seeking to wrest business from Chinese firms.

Export-Import Bank of India, the state-controlled trade financing institution, has pledged US$800 million in Myanmar, which includes funds to upgrade the Yangon-Mandalay railway and a plant for Tata Motors to assemble vehicles in the South-east Asian nation, Executive director david Rasquinha said. China, which has beaten Indian companies in the race to invest in energy assets from Kazakhstan to Venezuela, has agreed to lend more than US$2.4 billion in Myanmar.

Exim Bank of India faces an uneven contest as China Development Bank, which has a loan book more than three times the size of the World Bank, and the Export-Import Bank of China offer cheap loans to snare business. The Indian lender plans to sign credit agreements of as much as US$500 million by next month to participate in an economy that the IMF forecasts will expand 7 per cent over the next five years.

"We shouldn't get pessimistic because competition is there," Mr Rasquinha said. "We should be seeing the size of the pie and fighting smart."

State-run Chinese companies have spent US$19.5 billion this year acquiring energy and resources assets overseas versus India's single US$2.5 billion investment by Oil & Natural Gas Corp.

Exim Bank of India has been focusing on Africa. About 60 per cent of the Indian lender's lines of credit are for countries in the continent, Mr Rasquinha said. It has so far signed 172 lines of credit with commitments of about US$10.5 billion, covering 75 nations, he said. That compares with a US$219 billion loan book at Exim Bank of China.The Indian lender expects to mirror some of its African success in Myanmar. Exim Bank is trying to "excite" Indian companies to conduct business in Myanmar, Mr Rasquinha said.

The lender charges a floating 50 basis point over the London interbank offered rate to a fixed 2 per cent on overseas lines of credit, Mr Rasquinha said.

Bharti Airtel, India's biggest mobile carrier, was among companies that had bid for a telecom licence in Myanmar, the nation's selection committee said on its website in April.

Norway's Telenor ASA and Ooredoo QSC of Qatar won licences to expand telecommunications in Myanmar, one of the world's last remaining untapped markets where only about one in 10 people has a mobile phone.Myanmar needs US$650 billion of investments by 2030 to support an 8 per cent gross domestic product growth potential, according to McKinsey Global Institute, the research unit of McKinsey & Co.

Myanmar's liberalisation may reduce the nation's traditional dependence on China, according to Olivia Boyd, a Beijing-based energy analyst at IHS Global Insight.

"Myanmar's dependence on China is lessening," Ms Boyd said. "Chinese companies now wield less bargaining power, meaning they may face further contract revision of this sort in the future." Bloomberg

Myanmar Minister of Tourism disagrees on foreign visitors staying in private homes

YANGON- The daily English-speaking newspaper Myanmar Times reported a few days ago that Minister for Hotels and Tourism U Htay Aung was not in favour of foreign visitors staying in private homes in Myanmar “as their manners are not appropriate for local residents” as quoted from the Minister.

The Minister indicated that foreigners would probably have difficulties to follow the customs of locals and if they do not, it might create a cultural shock for their guests. He was referring at customs such as sleeping facing the east or the fact to share only a single spoon when eating soup in a family.

All these comments came during a meeting of Mandalay’s tourism players – including hoteliers and tour guides. The Minister then indicated that “homestays” would only be considered as suitable when foreigners visit remote areas and where they are no other choices. Where hotels are available, he added, particularly in larger urban centres such as Yangon or Mandalay, such arrangements should not be permitted.

“The manners of some foreigners are not appropriate for Myanmar people. But we have to choose homestay where there are no hotels or guest houses. In the meantime, we also need to [stay] strictly alert to possible risks,” he said at the meeting, which was held at Mandalay’s Swan Hotel.

While technically banned, homestays can however be arranged by guides when tourists go on multidays treks. They would generally stay at monasteries.

The Myanmar Times quoted Ko Thaung Naing Oo, from the Myanmar Tourist Guide Association’s Mandalay branch, who explained that homestays would certainly help to alleviate the country’s hotel shortage. However, it would then request from tour operators to make an effort of explaining properly to visitors what are the customs and the way to behave as a private guest of a Myanmar host family.

The current lack of adequate accommodation for visitors to Myanmar is a concern as tourism continues to grow rapidly. After topping a million foreign travellers last year, The Minister for Hotels and Tourism indicated earlier in July that tourist arrivals are growing by 30% this year and that visitors could reach 1.8 million travellers by year end.

Talking to Myanmar Upper House, Minister U Htay Aung declared that the country is still “in need to develop infrastructure, supporting and providing services in line with the tourist increase. We have about 30,000 hotel rooms ready for the tourists. About 10,000 more rooms will be ready in the end of this year”.

ျမန္မာတြင္ အာဆီယံႏိုင္ငံမ်ား ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံမႈ ေဒၚလာ ၁၄ ဘီလီယံေက်ာ္

ရန္ကုန္၊ ၾသဂုတ္ ၂၃

ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံတြင္ အာဆီယံႏိုင္ငံမ်ားမွ လာေရာက္ ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံထားေသာ
ႏိုင္ငံျခားရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံမႈမွာ အေမရိကန္ေဒၚလာ ၁၄ ဘီလီယံေက်ာ္ ရွိေၾကာင္း ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံမႈႏွင့္ ကုမၸဏီမ်ား ညႊန္ၾကားမႈ ဦးစီးဌာနက ဇူလိုင္လအထိ ထုတ္ျပန္ေသာ စာရင္းမ်ားအရ သိရသည္။

အာဆီယံႏိုင္ငံမ်ားက ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံအတြင္း ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံမႈမွာ အေမရိကန္ေဒၚလာ ၁၄၁၃၀ ဒသမ ၁၃ သန္းရွိၿပီး ႏိုင္ငံေပါင္း ေျခာက္ႏိုင္ငံမွ လုပ္ငန္းေပါင္း ၂၂၃ ခုတြင္ ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံျခင္းျဖစ္ကာ ကုန္ထုတ္ လုပ္မႈလုပ္ငန္းတြင္ အမ်ားဆုံး ျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း ယင္းစာရင္းမ်ားအရ သိရသည္။

အာဆီယံႏိုင္ငံမ်ားအနက္ ထိုင္းႏိုင္ငံက အမ်ားဆုံး ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံထားၿပီး အေမရိကန္ေဒၚလာ ၁၀ ဘီလီယံနီးပါး ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံထားကာ စင္ကာပူက ေဒၚလာ ၂ ဘီလီယံေက်ာ္၊ မေလးရွားက ေဒၚလာ တစ္ဘီလီယံေက်ာ္၊ ဗီယက္နမ္က ေဒၚလာ သန္းငါးရာေက်ာ္၊ အင္ဒိုနီးရွားက ေဒၚလာ သန္းႏွစ္ရာ့ငါးဆယ္နီးပါးႏွင့္ ဘ႐ူႏိုင္းႏိုင္ငံက ေဒၚလာ ေလးသန္းေက်ာ္ ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံထားသည္။

“ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံမႈေတြအားလုံး တိုင္းျပည္အတြက္ တကယ္အသုံးဝင္ဖို႔ေတာ့ လိုတယ္။ အာဆီယံႏိုင္ငံေတြက AEC တို႔၊ AFTA တို႔စာရင္ ဒီထက္ပိုဝင္ လာပါလိမ့္မယ္” ဟု သမဝါယမဝန္ႀကီး ဌာနမွ အၿငိမ္းစားအရာရွိ ဦးရန္ေနာင္က မွတ္ခ်က္ျပဳသည္။

ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံတြင္ ျပည္ပမွလာေရာက္ ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံမႈ ပမာဏသည္ ယခုႏွစ္ ဇူလိုင္လအထိ စာရင္းမ်ားအရ အေမရိကန္ေဒၚလာ ၄၂ ဘီလီယံေက်ာ္ ရွိသည္။

ထို႔အျပင္ ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံတြင္ ဥေရာပႏိုင္ငံမ်ားမွ အေမရိကန္ေဒၚလာ ေလးဘီလီယံနီးပါး ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံထားၿပီး ေဟာင္ေကာင္ က ေဒၚလာေျခာက္ဘီလီယံ ေက်ာ္၊ ကိုရီးယားက ေဒၚလာသုံးဘီလီယံ ေက်ာ္၊ ဂ်ပန္က ေဒၚလာသန္းသုံးရာနီးပါး ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံထားသည္။

ရန္ကုန္ေျမေစ်း က်ဆင္းရန္ အစိုးရစတင္လုပ္ေဆာင္၊ ေနရာ အလိုက္ ေျမေစ်းမ်ားသတ္မွတ္

ေနျပည္ေတာ္၊ ၾသဂုတ္ ၂၃

အိမ္၊ ၿခံ၊ ေျမ ေစ်းႏႈန္းမ်ား အဆမတန္ႀကီး ျမင့္ေနမႈႏွင့္ အခြန္အေကာက္မ်ား ဆုံး႐ႈံးျခင္းမွ ကာကြယ္ရန္ ရန္ကုန္တိုင္းေဒသႀကီးအတြင္း ေနရာေဒသအလိုက္ တစ္ေပပတ္လည္ ေျမေစ်းႏႈန္းမ်ားကို တရားဝင္ သတ္မွတ္လိုက္ၿပီ ျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း ဘ႑ာေရးဝန္ႀကီးဌာန ဒုတိယဝန္ႀကီး ေဒါက္တာေမာင္ေမာင္သိမ္း က ေျပာၾကားသည္။

ယင္းသို႔ တစ္ေပပတ္လည္ေျမ ေပါက္ေစ်းႏႈန္းကို တိုင္းေဒသႀကီးႏွင့္ ျပည္နယ္အားလုံးကို ကာလေပါက္ေစ်းႏွင့္အညီ သတ္မွတ္ေပးရန္ သက္ဆိုင္ရာေဒသ အစိုးရတာဝန္ရွိသူမ်ား ပါသည့္ ေစ်းႏႈန္းတြက္ခ်က္သည့္ အဖြဲ႕ထံမွ ေတာင္းခံထားျခင္းျဖစ္ၿပီး ရန္ကုန္တိုင္းေဒသႀကီးအတြက္ ေနရာအလိုက္ ေျမေစ်းႏႈန္းမ်ားကို တြက္ခ်က္သတ္မွတ္ၿပီး ျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း ၎က ရွင္းျပသည္။

“ေနရာအလိုက္ ဝင္ဒါမီယာဆို ဘယ္ေစ်း၊ ေျမာက္ဒဂုံဆို ဘယ္ေစ်း၊ တစ္ေပပတ္လည္ႏႈန္းနဲ႔ တြက္ခ်က္ထားပါတယ္” ဟု ေဒါက္တာေမာင္ေမာင္သိမ္းက ဆိုသည္။

ယင္းသို႔ ေနရာေဒသအလိုက္ ကာလေပါက္ေစ်းႏွင့္အညီ သတ္မွတ္ထားသည့္ ေျမေစ်းႏႈန္းမ်ားကို မၾကာမီ ထုတ္ျပန္ေပးမည္ျဖစ္ၿပီး ယင္းေပါက္ေစ်းအတိုင္း အခြန္အခမ်ား ေပးေဆာင္ရမည္ ျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း ၎ကထပ္ေလာင္း ေျပာၾကားသည္။

“ေျမေစ်းေတြ တစ္ေပႏႈန္းသတ္မွတ္ရင္ သတ္မွတ္တဲ့အတိုင္း အခြန္ေတာ့ရမယ္၊ ေျမေစ်းေတာ့ က်သြားမွာ မဟုတ္ဘူး။ ႀကဳိက္ေရာင္းႀကဳိက္ဝယ္ ေျမေမွာင္ခို ေစ်းကြက္သေဘာေတြ ရွိလာမယ္” ဟု စိုင္းခြန္ေနာင္ အိမ္၊ ၿခံ၊ ေျမ အက်ဳိးေဆာင္လုပ္ငန္းမွ မန္ေနဂ်ာ ဦးရန္ေအာင္က သုံးသပ္သည္။

ေျမေစ်းႏႈန္းကို ယင္းသို႔ သတ္မွတ္ပါက စာခ်ဳပ္ေပၚတြင္သာ သတ္မွတ္ႏႈန္းျဖင့္ စာခ်ဳပ္ခ်ဳပ္ဆိုေသာ္လည္း ေစ်းႏႈန္း ပိုေပးဝယ္ျခင္းမ်ဳိးကို အစိုးရက ထိန္းခ်ဳပ္ႏိုင္မည္ မဟုတ္ေၾကာင္း ၎ကဆက္လက္ ေျပာၾကားသည္။

“ဒီလိုေစ်းႏႈန္း သတ္မွတ္လို႔ ေျမေစ်း မက်ႏိုင္ဘူး။ ေစ်းကြက္ သေဘာအရေစ်းက ဝယ္သူရွိရင္ ဆက္တက္ေနမွာပဲ” ဟု ျပည္ႀကီးတံခြန္ အိမ္၊ ၿခံ၊ ေျမ အက်ဳိးေဆာင္လုပ္ငန္းမွ မန္ေနဂ်ာ ဦးေနေဇာ္ေအာင္က ေျပာၾကားသည္။

အိမ္၊ ၿခံ၊ ေျမ အက်ဳိးေဆာင္မ်ားက ယင္းသို႔ သုံးသပ္ေနေသာ္လည္း ယခုေဆာင္႐ြက္ခ်က္မွာ ျပည္တြင္း အိမ္၊ ၿခံ၊ ေျမေစ်း က်ဆင္းေစေရး အစိုးရ၏ ကနဦး ေျခလွမ္းမွ်သာျဖစ္ၿပီး ေနာက္ဆက္တြဲ ဆက္တိုက္လုပ္ေဆာင္မည့္ အစီအစဥ္မ်ား ရွိသည္ဟု ယူဆရေၾကာင္း၊ ျပည္တြင္း အိမ္၊ ၿခံ၊ ေျမေစ်း ျမင့္တက္မႈေၾကာင့္ ႏိုင္ငံျခား ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံမႈ အပါအဝင္ ျပည္တြင္း စီးပြားေရး ဖြံ႕ၿဖဳိးေစမႈတို႔တြင္ ႀကီးစြာေသာ အဟန္႔အတား ျဖစ္ေနသျဖင့္ အစိုးရက ေျမေစ်းက်ဆင္းေစရန္ ကာလအတန္ၾကာကပင္ စီစဥ္ထားသည္ျဖစ္ရာ ဆင့္ကဲလုပ္ေဆာင္မႈမ်ား ဆက္လက္ျဖစ္ေပၚလာမည္ ထင္ေၾကာင္း စီးပြားေရးလုပ္ငန္းရွင္တစ္ဦးက သုံးသပ္သည္။

ေျမေစ်းႏႈန္း ႀကီးျမင့္မႈကို တားဆီးရာတြင္ တဇြတ္ထိုး ေဆာင္႐ြက္၍ မရသည္ကို သိရွိေၾကာင္း၊ ယခုအခါ အခြန္အဖြဲ႕ (Tax Monitoring Board) ကို ဖြဲ႕စည္းထားၿပီးေနာက္ အခြန္အခမ်ား ပိုမို ေကာက္ခံသည့္ နည္းျဖင့္သာ ေျမေစ်းႏႈန္းမ်ားကို ထိန္းခ်ဳပ္ႏိုင္မည္ ျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း သမၼတ႐ုံးဝန္ႀကီး ဦးစိုးသိန္းက ေျပာၾကားသည္။

“ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံမႈေတြေႏွးတာ ေျမေစ်းကလည္း အဓိကအေၾကာင္း ျဖစ္ေနေတာ့ အဲဒါ ျပန္စိစစ္ၿပီး အခြန္နဲ႔ ထိန္းမယ္” ဟု ၎ကဆိုသည္။

တိုင္းေဒသႀကီးႏွင့္ ျပည္နယ္အလိုက္ ေျမယာေစ်းႏႈန္း တြက္ခ်က္သည့္ လုပ္ငန္းကို သက္ဆိုင္ရာ ေဒသအစိုးရအဖြဲ႕ဝင္ ဝန္ႀကီးတစ္ဦးစီ ပါဝင္သည့္ ေစ်းႏႈန္းတြက္ခ်က္သည့္အဖြဲ႕ ဖြဲ႕စည္းေဆာင္႐ြက္ေနေၾကာင္း ဦးစိုးသိန္းက ထပ္ေလာင္းေျပာၾကားသည္။

စီမံကိန္းသတင္းမ်ားႏွင့္ အျခားဆက္စပ္ အေၾကာင္းအရာ မ်ားေၾကာင့္ ေျမေစ်းႏႈန္းမ်ား ျမင့္တက္ရျခင္းမွာ ေလာင္းကစား ျပဳလုပ္လိုသည့္ အေလ့အထမ်ားေၾကာင့္ျဖစ္ၿပီး ယင္းျဖစ္ရပ္မ်ားကို ထိန္းသိမ္းရန္ ေငြေၾကး ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံမႈ ျပဳလုပ္ႏိုင္မည့္ ေနရာတစ္ခု ျဖစ္လာေရးအတြက္ ၂၀၁၅ ခုႏွစ္အမီ စေတာ့အိတ္ခ်ိန္းတစ္ခုကို ဂ်ပန္ႏိုင္ငံ၏ အကူအညီျဖင့္ တည္ေထာင္သြားမည္ ျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း ေဒါက္တာ ေမာင္ေမာင္သိမ္းက ဆက္လက္ေျပာၾကားသည္။

ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံတြင္ အိမ္၊ ၿခံ၊ ေျမမ်ားကို ေငြပိုေငြလွ်ံ ရွိသူမ်ားက လုပ္ငန္းတစ္ခုသဖြယ္ အက်ဳိးအျမတ္ရရွိရန္ ေစ်းကစားမႈေၾကာင့္ ကာလအတန္ၾကာကပင္ ေျမေစ်းမ်ား ျမင့္တက္ေနျခင္းျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း၊ ယင္းအျပင္ အစိုးရသစ္လက္ထက္တြင္ ဝင္ေရာက္လာရန္ရွိသည့္ ျပည္ပ ရင္းႏွီးျမႇဳပ္ႏွံမႈမ်ားကို ေစ်းကိုင္ထားႏိုင္ရန္ အတြက္လည္း ေငြပိုေငြလွ်ံ ရွိသူမ်ားက ေျမကြက္မ်ားကို ေစ်းျမင့္ေပးဝယ္ကာ ကိုင္ထားၾက၍ ျပည္တြင္းေျမေစ်းမ်ား ဆက္တိုက္တက္လာျခင္း ျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း စီးပြားေရးပညာရွင္မ်ားက သုံးသပ္ထားသည္။

RIL, OVL, Cairn in race for Myanmar blocks

India's Reliance Industries, ONGC Videsh and Cairn India are vying with global energy giants Shell, ConocoPhillips and ExxonMobil for 30 offshore oil and gas blocks that Myanmar has put on offer.

In all, 61 companies have been pre-qualified to bid for 11 shallow water and 19 deepwater blocks in an international tender, according to Myanmar's Energy Ministry.

The shortlisted companies from India include RIL, ONGC Videsh (the overseas arm of state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp), Oil India Ltd, Cairn India, gas utility GAIL India and Jubilant Offshore Drilling (JODPL).

International oil majors that pre-qualified include Shell, ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil, Total of France, Norway's Statoil, Eni of Italy, Spain's Repsol, Anadarko Petroleum of US, Husky Energy, Hess of US, Murphy Oil, Premier Oil of UK, Woodside Energy and Delek Energy.

Asian national oil companies such as China National Petroleum Corp, Korea National Oil Corp, Korea Gas Corp and Japan's JX Nippon Oil & Gas Exploration Corp have also been shortlisted.

A notice on the ministry's website said the shortlisted firms had been called to view data on the blocks on offer last month. Myanmar is looking at awarding the acreages in February or March next year.

OVL visited the data room on July 15, followed by OIL and Jubilant. Cairn India visited the data room on July 23, while GAIL did so the following day. RIL reviewed data on the blocks on July 25.

Data viewing will continue till August 12, the ministry notice said. According to the tender condition, international firms can submit bids for up to three blocks.

For the shallow water blocks, companies will have to team up with at least one Myanmar-owned company, while for the deepwater blocks, bidders will be expected to invest directly without any local participation, the ministry said.

Myanmar is simultaneously offering 18 blocks in its second onshore licensing round, for which OVL, Cairn, OIL, Jubilant and HPCL-owned Prize Petroleum have been pre-qualified from India.

In all, 59 companies have been shortlisted for the onshore blocks, including PTT Exploration and Production, Petronas, PetroVietnam, Sinopec, Total, Eni, Woodside and Exxon. Myanmar plans to award the onland blocks by December.

OVL and GAIL already have stakes in A-1 and A-3 blocks in Myanmar, which started production last month, and they are looking at consolidating their position in the energy-rich nation.