UPDATE: Australia Government OKs Gorgon Project With Conditions
26 8월 2009 - 12:01PM
Dow Jones News
The Australian government Wednesday gave conditional approval on
environmental grounds for an expansion of the proposed giant Gorgon
liquefied natural gas project offshore of Western Australia.
Chevron Corp. (CVX), the project operator and 50% stakeholder,
immediately welcomed the approval and said the joint venture
partners will make a final investment decision on Gorgon in coming
months.
The expansion is for a third train on top of two trains
contained in an initial proposal that was approved by the previous
federal government and that has also been approved by the Western
Australian state government.
The A$50 billion project is Australia's largest single resource
project and is set to deliver significant economic benefits and
create around 10,000 indirect and direct jobs in peak construction,
Managing Director of Chevron's Australian unit, Roy Krzywosinski,
said.
Australian Environment Minister Peter Garrett has imposed an
additional 28 conditions to the project.
"It is acceptable for the expansion to go ahead subject to the
conditions," he told reporters. "The public can have confidence
that the environment of Barrow (Island) will be properly protected"
given the conditions, he said.
Barrow Island is where the gas processing plant for the Gorgon
field will be located.
Garrett said his responsibilities were confined to considering
the likely impact on listed threatened species and other national
environment issues.
"I'm confident that in making this decisions I've observed all
regulatory requirements that I'm required to do under the
legislation," he said.
The company will be more than willing to meet the extra
conditions because under the terms of this particular approval the
government is required to work with the company and for the company
and the Commonwealth to agree those conditions, he said.
Chevron must now prepare approval plans for the protection,
management and monitoring of protected animals at the project site,
including the spectacled hare-wallaby, burrowing bettong and golden
bandicoot.
Also, Chevron must contribute A$62.5 million to the northwest
shelf flatback turtle conservation program.
Krzywosinski said the project has been sited to avoid areas of
particular conservation significance and the three-train LNG
development will have minimal environmental impact when compared
with the already-approved two train project.
The Gorgon field has potential reserves of more than 40 trillion
cubic feet of gas and an estimated economic life of at least 40
years from the time of startup.
It is being developed by Chevron, ExxonMobil Corp. (XOM) and
Royal Dutch Shell PLC. (RDSB). Shell and Exxon each have a 25%
stake in the project, which includes three 5.0 million metric tons
a year LNG plants, one of the largest carbon dioxide injection
projects and a domestic gas plant.
Exxon has struck two deals over Gorgon LNG so far this month,
including a 20-year deal with PetroChina Co. (PTR), the listed unit
of China National Petroleum Corp., to buy 2.25 million metric tons
of LNG a year, and a 20-year agreement to sell 1.5 million tons to
Petronet LNG Ltd. (532522.BY), India's largest LNG importer.
-By Ray Brindal, Dow Jones Newswires;
61-2-6208-0902; ray.brindal@dowjones.com