Woodside Petroleum and BHP Group gave final backing on Monday to
the $12 billion plan to develop the Scarborough natural gas
field off Western Australia and expand the onshore Pluto LNG
plant to process the fuel.
The deal also sees Woodside merge with BHP's petroleum arm, with
BHP shareholders to be issued new Woodside shares and ending up
with about 48% of the expanded share capital.
Scarborough field lies about 375 kilometres (233 miles) off the
coast of Western Australia state and holds about 11.1 trillion
cubic feet of dry gas.
Woodside expects to produce about 8 million tonnes of LNG per
annum at the to-be-built second train at its Pluto liquefaction
plant, and is targeting first cargo in 2026.
The company also said that the all-in cost of the LNG to be
produced is around $5.80 per million British thermal units (mmBtu),
which is well below the current spot price of $36.70, but also
considerably higher than the $1.85 the super-chilled fuel sank
to in May last year during the height of the coronavirus
pandemic.
The Scarborough and Pluto second train developments are also the
first major LNG project to reach a final investment decision in
Australia in about a decade, and comes after the industry spent
around $200 billion to expand capacity to around 80 million
tonnes, making the country the world's biggest LNG exporter.
At first glance the deal seems positive for both Woodside and
BHP.
It transforms Woodside into a top-10 global independent oil and
gas company and allows BHP, the world's biggest listed miner, an
opportunity to profitably exit an area of business no longer
viewed as core and frees it to concentrate on producing metals
viewed as essential to the energy transition.
However, it also means that Woodside will face increasing
environmental opposition to its business, especially in the wake
of the COP26 climate summit and mounting calls for an end to new
oil, gas and coal projects.
Woodside argues that Scarborough contains "only around 0.1%
carbon dioxide, and Scarborough gas processed through the
efficient and expanded Pluto LNG facility supports the
decarbonisation goals of our customers in Asia."
It's highly unlikely that environmental and climate groups will
share this view, and already they are lining up to fight against
the new development.
The Conservation Council of Western Australia is bringing a case
challenging the state's approval, without a full environmental
review, to allow Woodside to process gas at the Pluto LNG plant
from an expanded number of fields.
FINANCING
While there is likely to be ongoing and highly visible
opposition to Scarborough, there are also other concerns more
behind the scenes.
As part of the deal, Woodside entered into an agreement to sell
49% of the planned second LNG train at the Pluto processing
plant to private equity group Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP).
The terms of deal effectively commit GIP to providing financing,
but virtually all of the risk lies with Woodside with regards to
potential cost overruns, regulatory hurdles and changes to
emissions liabilities.
While GIP has a solid track record of investment in major
projects around the globe, the involvement of private equity in
a major LNG project in Australia breaks the usual pattern of
partnering with global oil companies, major trading houses or
utility customers in Asia.
The deal with GIP doesn't look advantageous to Woodside,
implying that it was unable to find any takers among more
traditional partners.
This could be a sign that LNG projects are getting harder to
finance and that already the major buyers in Japan and South
Korea are thinking of ways to meet their net-zero emissions
targets by transitioning away from LNG.
The Scarborough LNG will also be hitting the market just around
the same time as major expansions from Qatar and Russia also
come to market, potentially creating an overhang of LNG at a
time when major buyers are likely to be increasingly
transitioning to renewable alternatives.
Effectively, Woodside is taking a bet that LNG will last in
Asia's energy mix for far longer than it should if net-zero
emissions goals are to be achieved.
(Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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