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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Project  





2 Assets  





3 Destruction of Aboriginal Cultural Heritage  





4 Production and sales  





5 Emissions Controversy  





6 Engineering heritage award  





7 See also  





8 References  





9 Further reading  














North West Shelf Venture







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North West Shelf Venture leases and infrastructure

The North West Shelf Venture, situated in the north-westofWestern Australia, is Australia's largest resource development project. It involves the extraction of petroleum (mostly natural gas and condensate) at offshore production platforms, onshore processing and export of liquefied natural gas, and production of natural gas for industrial, commercial and domestic use within the state. North West Shelf gas is processed at the Woodside Energy operated Karratha Gas Plant, located on the Murujuga Cultural Landscape (Burrup Peninsula). The construction of the Karratha Gas Plant included one of the largest mass-destruction events of Aboriginal Cultural Heritage.[1] The North West Shelf Venture is often cited as the single largest industrial emitter for Australia according to the Clean Energy Regulator.[2]

Project[edit]

With investments totalling $25 billion since the early 1980s, the project is the largest resource development in Australian history.[3] In the late 1980s, it was the largest engineering project in the world.[4] The Venture is underpinned by huge hydrocarbon reserves within the Carnarvon Basin, with only about one-third of the Venture's estimated total reserves of 33 trillion cubic feet (930 km3) of gas produced to date.

It was owned by a joint venture of six partners – BHP, BP, Chevron, Shell, Woodside Petroleum and a 50:50 joint venture between Mitsubishi and Mitsui &Co – with each holding an equal one-sixth shareholding.[5] Along with being a joint venture partner, Woodside is the project operator on behalf of the other participants.

On 1 June 2022, BHP's Petroleum business merged with Woodside Energy. Woodside Energy now hold one-third shareholding in the North West Shelf project.[6]

Assets[edit]

Karratha Gas Plant

The Karratha Gas Plant was built in the 1980s, originally including multiple LNG production trains. The cleaning of the Murujuga area for the construction of the Karratha Gas Plant involved the destruction of between 4,000 and 5,000 sacred rock art sites.[7] In 2008, the facility capacity was increased to 16.3 million tonnes per year with the commissioning of a fifth, 4.4 million tonnes per year LNG production train. As well as processing gas for export, the facility supplies domestic supplies to consumers and businesses in Western Australia. The facility also processes condensate which is extracted from the gaseous hydrocarbons during processing.

The venture currently has three currently active offshore facilities. A fourth, North Rankin B is under construction:

Commissioned in 1984, North Rankin A was the then-largest gas production platform in the world, capable of producing 1,815 million cubic feet (51,400,000 m³) of gas per day and up to 47,400 barrels per day (7,540 m3/d) of condensate. Modifications have increased the facility's capacity by 50% and it remains one of the world's largest gas platforms.[8]
It is located 135 km north-west of Karratha and can accommodate more than 120 people. It services 25 production wells in the North Rankin and Perseus fields.
At a cost of $2bn, the platform was, when commissioned in early 1995, the largest single offshore oil and gas investment ever made in Australia.
In late 2001, the Goodwyn platform was linked to the Echo/Yodel gas and condensate fields via a 23 km 12-inch (300 mm) pipeline. Hydrocarbons from the Goodwyn field are transferred via a subsea pipeline to North Rankin before being transported to Karratha for processing. It is designed for up to 30 production wells (19 currently), including five re-injection wells. It accommodates 137 people.
It has a production capacity of 32,000 tonnes of gas per day.
The facility was commissioned in late 1995 and produces up to 50,000 barrels per day (7,900 m3/d)[9]ofcrude oil which is offloaded via a flexible line to oil tankers moored astern. Located 34 km east of the North Rankin A platform, it is moored to a riser turret which is connected by flexible flowlines to subsea production wells at the Wanaea, Cossack, Lambert and Hermeson gas fields.
It has a storage capacity of 1.15 million barrels (183,000 m3) of oil and a production capacity of 150,000 barrels (24,000 m3) of oil per day.
In May 2008, Woodside announced plans to replace the 13-year-old vessel with a view to extending oil output to 2025-2030.[9]

The condensate is transported to the Burrup Peninsula (Murujuga) onshore facility on the mainland 130 km away by two 42-inch (1.1 m) and 40-inch (1.0 m) undersea pipes.

Other assets include:

In March 2008, the partners approved a A$5 billion North Rankin 2 project which will underpin supply commitments to customers in Asia beyond 2013.[9] The project will recover remaining low pressure gas from the ageing North Rankin and Perseus gas fields using compression. It will include the installation of a new platform (North Rankin B) which will stand in about 125 metres of water and will be connected by a 100-metre bridge to the existing North Rankin A platform.[11]

Destruction of Aboriginal Cultural Heritage[edit]

During the construction of the Karratha Gas Plant in the 1980s, it is estimated that 5,000 sacred rock art sites were destroyed.[12] This is estimated to be the largest destruction of Aboriginal cultural heritage in Australia, and likely one of the largest global cultural heritage destruction events outside of war time.

In 2023, during a speech at the National Press Club, Woodside CEO Meg O'Neill admitted that Woodside had previously removed and destroyed sacred Murujuga rock art during the construction of the Burrup Hub mega-project. This marks the first instance of Woodside publicly accepting responsibility for the destruction of numerous rock art sites on Murujuga. Woodside has previously been implicated in the destruction of thousands of sacred rock art sites during the construction of earlier phases of the Burrup Hub mega-project, including the Karratha Gas Plant and Pluto LNG processing facility. O'Neill characterized the historical removals, some of which occurred as recently as the 21st Century, as "culturally appropriate at the time."[13][14] In response, Raelene Cooper, a Mardudhunera woman and former Chair of the Murujuga Aboriginal Corporation, said in response:

"For Meg O'Neill to describe the destruction of our sacred rock art with bulldozers as culturally appropriate at the time quite frankly beggars belief and is deeply offensive. How can she say it was culturally appropriate - who did Woodside ask for permission, and who gave them cultural authority? Where was the consultation process? This is our sacred cultural heritage that Woodside bulldozed into the sea. Since the 1960s, archaeologists and experts have been clear about the cultural heritage significance of this rock art but Woodside continued to damage, remove and destroy our rock art. How was it culturally appropriate? It was not then and it is not now. It is misleading for anyone to suggest otherwise."[13]

Production and sales[edit]

The first LNG shipments went to Japan in 1989. Two hundred shipments per year (about one shipment every 1.5 days) in the purpose-built LNG carriers totalling more than seven million tons are made around the world. Markets include sales to long term customers in Japan and spot buyers in China, Spain, South Korea and the United States.[15]

To date, the venture has produced more than 1000 cargoes of light crude oil (natural gas condensate). Condensate is sold on the international energy market.

In 2002, a contract was signed to supply 3 million tonnes of LNG a year[16] from the North West Shelf Venture to China. The contract was worth $25 billion: between $700 million and $1 billion a year for 25 years.[17][16] The price was guaranteed not to increase until 2031, and, as international LNG prices were increasing, by 2015 China was paying one-third as were Australian consumers.[16]

The venture is Western Australia's largest single producer of domestic gas providing about 65% of total State production.[3] Pipeline gas is processed at the consortium's Karratha facility, and transported to customers in southern Western Australia via the 1530 kmDampier to Bunbury Natural Gas Pipeline. A subsidiary company, North West Shelf Gas Pty Ltd markets the domestic gas component to customers in Western Australia through private contracts and sales to Alinta.[18]

Emissions Controversy[edit]

In 2019, Woodside, and the Joint Venture partners, Chevron, Shell, bp, and Mimi, proposed to extend the life of the North West Shelf project, including the Karratha Gas Plant.[19] The proposal is to extend the life of the fossil fuel project by another 50 years. It is estimated that extending Australia's most polluting project by 50 years could result in approximately 4.3 billion tonnes of carbon emissions, with only 8 percent of that aligning with the country's net-zero target by 2050.[20]

The North West Shelf gas project, operated by Woodside outside Karratha in Western Australia's northwest, emerged as Australia's largest industrial emitter in 2020–21, as reported by the Clean Energy Regulator.[21]

The independent Environmental Protection Authority of Western Australia, advising the state government, has recommended extending the project's operation until 2070, provided it consistently reduces operational emissions.[22]

If left unchecked, the project in the Pilbara region would emit 385 million tonnes of carbon over its extended lifespan through production, referred to as scope 1 emissions, at the Karratha Gas Plant.

The EPA's assessment does not include scope 3 emissions, generated from the combustion of the gas, predominantly in Asian countries. This omission implies that North West Shelf customers worldwide will emit approximately 80.19 million tonnes of carbon annually.[23]

Engineering heritage award[edit]

The first two phases of the project received an Engineering Heritage International Marker from Engineers Australia as part of its Engineering Heritage Recognition Program.[24]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Race and power collide in a fight over sacred rock art". www.9news.com.au. 2022-09-25. Retrieved 2024-06-08.
  • ^ Kruijff, Peter de (2022-06-30). "Watchdog greenlights Australia's most polluting project to run to 2070". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2024-06-08.
  • ^ a b "North West Shelf > overview". Woodside Energy. Archived from the original on 2008-05-25. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
  • ^ Murray, Robert (1991). From the Edge of a Timeless Land: A History of the North West Shelf Gas Project. Allen & Unwin, Sydney. p. 188. ISBN 0-04-442295-4.
  • ^ "Participants". North West Shelf Gas. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
  • ^ "BHP Petroleum merger with Woodside". 2022. Retrieved 5 June 2024.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  • ^ "Murujuga's rock art is being destroyed - where is the outrage?". www.uwa.edu.au. Retrieved 2024-06-08.
  • ^ (2004) North Rankin A - life extension project. North Rankin `A' Platform (North West Shelf, W.A.)Trunkline, June 2004, supplement
  • ^ a b c "NW Shelf Venture Agrees to Replace Cossack Oil Production Ship". Bloomberg.com. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
  • ^ "Withnell Bay LNG Jetty". Dampier Port Authority. Archived from the original on 2008-03-25. Retrieved 2008-06-15.
  • ^ "North West Shelf Venture Approves North Rankin 2 Project" (PDF). Woodside Petroleum Ltd ASX announcement. 31 March 2008.
  • ^ Parliament of Australia (2018). "Protection of Aboriginal rock art of the Burrup Peninsula, Chapter 6: Preservation and management of rock art" (PDF). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • ^ a b News, Mirage. "Woodside CEO Admits Removal of Historic Rock Art at Murujuga". Mirage News. Retrieved 2024-06-08. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  • ^ Elsworthy, Emma (2023-04-26). "'Smoke and mirrors bullshit': Woodside CEO's speech denounced by critics". Crikey. Retrieved 2024-06-08.
  • ^ "North West Shelf Venture". Hydrocarbons Technology. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
  • ^ a b c The Age, 30 September 2017, How Australia blew its future gas supplies by Tony Wright
  • ^ smh.com.au, 9 August 2002, Gas boom as China signs $25bn deal by Tom Allard and John Garnaut
  • ^ "About NWSG". North West Shelf Gas Pty Ltd. Archived from the original on 2008-07-19. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
  • ^ "North West Shelf Project Extension | EPA Western Australia". www.epa.wa.gov.au. Retrieved 2024-06-08.
  • ^ Kruijff, Peter de (2022-06-30). "Watchdog greenlights Australia's most polluting project to run to 2070". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2024-06-08.
  • ^ "Australia's 10 highest greenhouse gas emitters 2020-21 | Clean Energy Regulator". cer.gov.au. Retrieved 2024-06-08.
  • ^ Kruijff, Peter de (2022-06-30). "Watchdog greenlights Australia's most polluting project to run to 2070". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2024-06-08.
  • ^ Kruijff, Peter de (2022-06-30). "Watchdog greenlights Australia's most polluting project to run to 2070". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2024-06-08.
  • ^ "North West shelf Natural Gas Project -". Engineers Australia. Retrieved 2020-05-06.
  • Further reading[edit]


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