Chevron Begins LNG Production Off Australia
08 March 2016 - 11:30AM
Dow Jones News
MELBOURNE, Australia—Chevron Corp. plans to ship its first cargo
from its massive US$54 billion Gorgon gas-export facility off
Australia's west coast next week.
The energy giant said Tuesday it had started producing liquefied
natural gas from the Gorgon project on remote Barrow Island, a
milestone for a development that has been hit by cost blowouts and
delays and now becomes operational amid a slump in prices.
The project is a cornerstone in Chevron's efforts to become a
major LNG supplier over the next four years, with Gorgon and a
neighboring development in Western Australia known as Wheatstone
targeting growing demand for natural gas in the Asia-Pacific
region.
Chairman and Chief Executive John Watson said the long-term
fundamentals are attractive for LNG, gas that is chilled to make it
easier to store and transport. "We expect legacy assets such as
Gorgon will drive long-term growth and create shareholder value for
decades to come," he said.
The price tag for Gorgon ballooned since the partners made the
decision to invest in 2009, by about 45% due to delays, higher
labor costs and a jump in the value of the Australian currency
against the dollar. Chevron is operator and majority owner of the
Gorgon project, with Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell PLC
each holding 25% stakes. Osaka Gas, Tokyo Gas and Chubu Electric
Power each have minor interests.
It has been a similar tale for other LNG projects dotted around
the country, which together have seen energy companies commit more
than US$200 billion to developments that have positioned Australia
to leapfrog Qatar in the coming years as the world's leading LNG
exporter. LNG contracts are tied to crude-oil prices, which have
fallen sharply over the last almost two years.
Gorgon will be one of the world's biggest new LNG operations and
represents the single largest investment in Australia by a private
company or government. Three production lines, or trains, will
produce 15.6 million metric tons of LNG a year plus enough gas to
generate electricity for 2.5 million Australian homes at full
capacity.
In recent months, Chevron has lined up two Chinese buyers for
gas from its Australian operations. In all, it has secured
commitments for more than 80% of the volumes from the Gorgon and
Wheatstone projects, the company said Tuesday. Still, Chevron in
January pushed back the expected first output from the US$29
billion Wheatstone development by about six months to mid-2017, due
to delays in building parts in Malaysia.
Gas for the Gorgon project comes from two fields between 130 and
220 kilometres off the northwest coast of Western Australia. LNG
will be offloaded via a 2.1 kilometer long loading jetty on Barrow
Island, a nature reserve located about 60 kilometers off the coast,
while domestic gas will be piped to the mainland. At full output,
there will be several hundred workers on Barrow Island, primarily
operational and maintenance staff, who fly in for two-week
stretches.
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 07, 2016 19:15 ET (00:15 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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