Papua New Guinea
Australia, Banking, Economics, Featured Work, Infrastructure, Papua New Guinea, Politics - Wednesday, April 1, 2009 11:14 - 0 Comments
PNG LNG: What could Papua New Guinea’s new pipeline project bring?
Euromoney, April 2009
October is going to be a big month for Papua New Guinea. It doesn’t sound much on paper: it’s the deadline for the final investment decision on a liquefied natural gas and pipeline project. But it’s a project that will change the country dramatically – economically and socially. In fact, it’s hard to think of another example anywhere in the world where so much, good and bad, might depend on a single investment decision.
The project in question is known as PNG LNG, and it is an attempt to commercialise undeveloped petroleum and gas resources in the highlands and western provinces of Papua New Guinea. The gas has to go through a 470 kilometre pipeline across rugged terrain to a liquefied natural gas facility 20 kilometres outside Port Moresby, the capital, for liquefaction; once there, about 6.3 million tonnes of LNG product a year will be loaded into tankers to be shipped to offshore gas markets worldwide. ExxonMobil, with its Esso Highlands subsidiary as operator, is the driver of the project with a 41.5% interest; also in there are Australia’s Oil Search (34%) and Santos (17.7%) and Japan’s Nippon Oil (5.4%) among others, with the PNG state expected to join as an equity participant at a later date.
The numbers attached to this project are extraordinary in any context, but particularly so in an economically small country where 85% of the population exists on subsistence agriculture. The development costs are put at between $11 billion and $14 billion, figures confirmed to Euromoney by the Investment Promotion Agency (IPA); once completed in 2013 or early 2014, it is expected to double Papua New Guinea’s approximately $12 billion GDP. Continue…
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