Viet Nam News

Australia backs long-term gas drilling despite 2050 climate goals

- REUTERS

Australia's Labor government yesterday laid out a strategy to boost natural gas developmen­t even as it remains committed to net zero carbon emissions by 2050, highlighti­ng demand from key Asian trade partners.

Australia is one of the world's largest exporters of liquefied natural gas (LNG), and Resources Minister Madeline King said gas would be needed "through to 2050 and beyond" in the global shift to cleaner energy.

"It is clear we will need continued exploratio­n, investment and developmen­t in the sector to support the path to net zero for Australia and for our export partners, and to avoid a shortfall in gas supplies," she said, launching the government's Future Gas Strategy.

Australia supplied around a fifth of global LNG shipped last year, with the largest projects run by Chevron and Woodside Energy Group in Western Australia, with its biggest customers in China, Japan

and South Korea.

The centre-left government came up with the new strategy after facing criticism for a range of short term measures it took to boost domestic gas supply and drive down soaring energy prices in 2022 in the wake of Russia's war on Ukraine.

The plan lays out ways to reduce Australia's emissions, such as leasing more offshore acreage for carbon capture and storage, while encouragin­g developmen­t of new gas fields, including tightening "use it or lose it" provisions on existing leases.

It comes as Woodside and Santos battle environmen­talists opposing gas projects they are developing off northweste­rn Australia, while smaller companies face opponents to shale gas drilling in the Northern Territory.

"The strategy also makes it clear that we can't rely on past investment­s to get us through the next decades, as existing fields deplete," King said in a column in the Australian Financial Review yesterday.

"That will mean a continued commitment to exploratio­n, and an openness to the kinds of foreign investment that have helped build the industry into the powerhouse it is today."

The announceme­nt was welcomed by energy producers but criticised by renewable energy advocates and environmen­talists.

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