The Sun (Malaysia)

Exxon warns Australia faces sharp drop in gas supply

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Exxon Mobil Corp yesterday gave a dire warning about the outlook of Australia’s domestic gas supply, joining other gas producers in calling for policy stability and more investment in the sector.

There is an urgent need for new investment in domestic gas supply and infrastruc­ture to provide energy security and affordabil­ity for households and businesses, ExxonMobil Australia’s commercial director David Berman said in a speech to the Australian Domestic Gas Outlook (ADGO) conference in Sydney.

“Without investment, ExxonMobil Australia estimates by 2030 domestic gas supply available to southern states will decrease by 44%,” he said.

Exxon operates the Gippsland Basin joint venture, the biggest single gas supplier into the country’s southern region, which includes New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania.

Berman said it takes just months to apply for and receive an onshore and offshore drilling permits in the US but in Australia it can take up to two years.

“Chasing sizably lower domestic gas prices requires significan­tly shorter regulatory timelines because one third of the gas that will be required by consumers on the east coast between 2025 and 2030 is not in production.”

The Gippsland Basin has the resources to be able to help plug the gap, but final investment decisions to develop that gas have yet to be made, Berman said.

Gas producer Senex Energy’s CEO Ian Davies said Australia’s environmen­tal approval process was killing investment as it takes almost three years for new projects to secure a green light.

Davies said the Labor government’s planned changes to its environmen­tal protection law had to ensure the nation’s resources industry remained competitiv­e.

Labor has proposed reforming the Environmen­t Protection and Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on Act with new legislatio­n and the establishm­ent of an agency to oversee developmen­t decisions.

“The 1,009 days it takes on average to approve a resources project under the Act is killing investment in Australia,” Davies said.

Senex, owned by South Korea’s Posco Internatio­nal Corp and Hancock Energy, is a Queensland-based gas producer.

It had been due to spend A$1 billion (RM3.1 billion) on expanding its Atlas project in Queensland’s Surat Basin.

The expansion was put on hold in December 2022 after the government set a price cap on gas sales by east coast producers to reduce soaring power bills for households. – Reuters

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