Saudi Arabia - joining the dots

A series of blog entries exploring Saudi Arabia's role in the oil markets with a brief look at the history of the royal family and politics that dictate and influence the Kingdom's oil policy

AIM - Assets In Market

AIM - Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum

Iran negotiations - is the end nigh?

Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum

Yemen: The Islamic Chessboard?

Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum

Acquisition Criteria

Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum

Valuation Series

Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum Lorem Ipsum

Showing posts with label P’nyang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label P’nyang. Show all posts

Friday, 2 March 2018

Papua New Guinea LNG force majeure a week after expansion plans announced




ExxonMobil has declared force majeure on PNG LNG after Papua New Guinea was hit by a 7.5 magnitude earthquake on Monday. The partners in the plant, which exported 7.8 million tonnes last year, are ExxonMobil (33.2% operator), Oil Search (29%), State of Papua New Guinea (16.8%), Santos (13.5%), JX Nippon (4.7%) and Mineral Resources Development Company of Papua New Guinea (2.8%). Latest reports are that the pipeline and liquefaction plant sustained minimal damage, but could potentially be another six weeks before it can be restarted.

This comes a week after the announcement by the upstream partners in Papua New Guinea’s giant gas resources to more than double the country’s liquefaction capacity to 16mmtpa at a cost of USD13 billion. The partners are planning to help add a further three trains in the country – one to support growth at ExxonMobil’s P’nyang field, and two to service new gas from Total’s Elk-Antelope development. FEED is planned to start later this year, but will require agreement of terms with the PNG government first including domestic supply obligations.

Given this is a brownfield expansion, it is significantly cheaper than the original USD19.5 billion construction cost of the project. The partners were previously toying with the idea of having a separate facility for Elk-Antelope gas as Total and ExxonMobil could not reach agreement. ExxonMobil was pushing for the gas to go through PNG LNG supported by train expansions, while Total was considering a new plant (Papua LNG). While the details on the new three trains remain high level and could still see a separate Papua LNG project, this agreement thaws the development discussions which have been frozen for more than a year. The separate trains supporting the different upstream gas sources will also be conducive to structuring and financing of the proposed project – avoiding the complexity involved with unitisations and co-mingled gas marketing. The new LNG could come onstream by the early 2020s and would arrive in time for an emerging LNG supply gap that is foreseen by the industry.