16 May 2014 | 14:37

Massive PNG gas project loads first shipment

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Papua New Guinea's Prime Minister Peter O'Neill. ©Reuters/Tim Wimborne Papua New Guinea's Prime Minister Peter O'Neill. ©Reuters/Tim Wimborne

Australian energy firm Santos said Friday the first exports from its huge US$19 billion gas project in Papua New Guinea will soon depart for Japan, four years after the joint venture was given the go-ahead, AFP reports.

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Australian energy firm Santos said Friday the first exports from its huge US$19 billion gas project in Papua New Guinea will soon depart for Japan, four years after the joint venture was given the go-ahead, AFP reports.

The massive project, operated by US energy giant ExxonMobil, had started loading its first cargo on the tanker "Spirit of HELA", which can reportedly carry up to 6.3 million cubic feet (177,000 cubic metres) of gas.

Santos chairman Ken Borda told shareholders at their annual meeting in Adelaide that the first shipment was a "great outcome for this extraordinary project", which had faced numerous hurdles including flooding during the construction phase.

"I am pleased to announce that the first export cargo is being loaded now and will soon depart PNG bound for Japan," he said.

PNG Prime Minister Peter O'Neill said on Thursday the project -- the largest development ever undertaken in the impoverished Pacific country -- was "something for all of Papua New Guinea to be proud of".

"This project puts PNG on the world stage as a country that can work with foreign investors to deliver projects on time," he said at a ceremony marking the first shipment.

The project will supply four major customers in Taiwan, Japan and China and is expected to produce an expected nine trillion cubic feet (255 billion cubic metres) of liquefied natural gas (LNG) over its 30-year life.

It includes gas production and processing facilities in PNG's Southern Highlands and Western Provinces, liquefication and storage facilities on the Gulf of Papua and more than 700 kilometres (450 miles) of pipelines.

ExxonMobil has the largest stake at 33.2 percent. Its partners include Oil Search Ltd (29 percent), the PNG government (16.6 percent), Santos (13.5 percent), Japan's Nippon Oil Corp (4.7 percent) and local landowners (2.8 percent).

The project will quadruples Santos' LNG production and, together with the company's Gladstone gas development in Australia, is expected to double its operating cash flows over the next two years, Borda said.

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