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Up to 7mn t/y of spare capacity available at North West Shelf by 2027

The North West Shelf (NWS) LNG project could have up to 7mn t/y of spare capacity available by 2027, equating to 40% of the project’s nominal capacity, according to Wood Mackenzie.

The Woodside-operated five-train NWS facility has been producing LNG since 1989. Next year production capacity becomes available for the first time.  

Wood Mackenzie Senior Analyst Daniel Toleman says: ‘Decisions on how to fill this gap need to be made now, not only because time is running out, but also because the joint venture is breaking up. Chevron is running a process to sell out of the NWS, and we see other majors likely to follow. We see two windows of opportunity for backfill – one for smaller projects with short lead times, and the second for larger-scale resources that can extend the life of the NWS through to 2050.’ 

Good progress has been made on near-term backfill small-scale projects. Wood Mackenzie believes the Pluto and Waitsia projects will add incremental supply into the NWS from 2022. However, these projects are only short-term solutions. In the longer term, large-scale developments are needed. The Scarborough and Browse developments, both operated by Woodside, are the most likely backfill options due to their size. Other possible candidates, such as Clio-Acme, or excess gas from the Greater Gorgon field development, now look unlikely.  

However, neither the Scarborough nor Browse developments are straight-forward to deliver. The former is currently slated to supply a new second train at the Pluto plant, while the latter is a remote, complex, carbon-intensive and high-capex greenfield mega-project. As such, it faces a myriad of challenges in current market conditions. 

Toleman comments: ‘Challenges aside, there are compelling reasons for keeping NWS full. Once third-party gas flows through the plant, partners will receive a tariff for liquefaction. The government will receive additional tax revenue, the Dampier to Bunbury pipeline operator receives more revenue and there will be more domestic gas supply for the local market. Upstream participants can also monetise undeveloped resources and gain access to potentially higher LNG prices on a low capital outlay.’

News Item details


Journal title: Petroleum Review

Countries: Australia -

Subjects: Liquefied natural gas, LNG markets, Forecasting

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