City
Epaper

Australian energy giant Woodside unveils controversial coastal gas drill plan

By ANI | Published: November 23, 2021 9:45 AM

Australian oil and gas giant Woodside Petroleum unveiled its multi-billion dollar plans to drill for liquified natural gas (LNG) off the Australian coast which caused concerns of the environmental group.

Open in App

Australian oil and gas giant Woodside Petroleum unveiled its multi-billion dollar plans to drill for liquified natural gas (LNG) off the Australian coast which caused concerns of the environmental group.

The project, worth 16.5 billion Australian dollars (about 11.92 billion U.S. dollars), is centred around the Scarborough gas field which lies in the Indian Ocean, some 375 km off the northwest of the West Australian (WA) coast.

Woodside chief executive Meg O'Neill said on Monday that approving the development was a "landmark achievement"."Today's decisions set Woodside on a transformative path," she said. "Scarborough will be a significant contributor to Woodside's cash flows, the funding of future developments and new energy products, and shareholder returns."

The development will include the creation of a 430 km pipeline linking Scarborough to the mainland where the gas will be processed at Woodside's Pluto LNG plant at Karratha of WA.

A second LNG train and new domestic gas facility at the Pluto site will also be constructed to handle the production of eight million tonnes of gas per annum.

Monday's announcement coincided with the finalization of an August deal for Woodside to buy fellow resource giant BHP's oil and gas business to create one of the world's biggest independent energy companies with operations across Australia, the United States and Africa.

"Woodside and BHP's respective oil and gas portfolios and experienced teams are better together. The combination will deliver the increased scale, diversity and resilience to better navigate the energy transition," said O'Neill.

News of the ambitious LNG project has also been welcomed by WA government leaders who forecast it will generate about 3,200 jobs.

Such assurances, however, have not been well-received by environmental groups who believe the project defies international efforts to end new fossil fuel projects.

"The International Energy Agency, one of the world's most conservative energy bodies, has said that there should be no new coal or gas projects, and yet here is Woodside... trying to rush this project through," said Greenpeace Australia Pacific chief executive David Ritter. (ANI/Xinhua)

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: KarrathaU.s.Woodside petroleumWoodsideMeg o'neillDavid ritter
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUS: One Passenger Shot Dead, Suspect in Custody After Hijacked Bus Pursuit in Georgia; Watch Videos

InternationalUS Fire: Over 1.2 Million Chickens Burn to Death in Massive Blaze at Egg Facility in Illinois (Watch Video)

InternationalOhio Chase Bank Blast: One Dead, Multiple Injured After Gas Leak Explosion in Youngstown Building; Dramatic Video Emerges

MaharashtraGanesh Chaturthi 2024: Pen's Ganpati Bappa Goes Global as Fifth Batch of 5,000 Idols Shipped to Canada and America

InternationalUS Announces $275 Million in New Security Assistance for Ukraine, Including Ammunitions and Artillery Rounds

International Realted Stories

InternationalHong Kong cancels passports of six pro-democracy activists living in exile, calls them "lawless wanted criminals"

InternationalEarthquake of Magnitude 4.0 Strikes Afghanistan (See Tweet)

InternationalUK General Election 2024: Hindu Manifesto Released Ahead of Polls, Calls for Protection of Temples

InternationalUS to send another Patriot missile system to Ukraine after repeated demands

InternationalNorway's envoy May-Elin Stener calls yoga India's "greatest gift" to the world