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West Australian LNG plants remain off line post-cyclone

  • Märkte: Natural gas
  • 27.03.26

Operators of Western Australia's four LNG terminals located in the Pilbara region have yet to assess the total damage from tropical cyclone Narelle, which passed directly over several key offshore gas facilities in the past 48 hours.

It could take until the weekend for helicopter crews to access platforms in the Indian ocean associated with several oil and gas developments, given persisting high seas and winds. Workers at most manned facilities were demobilised ahead of Narelle's passage through the region.

Chevron is working to restore production at the 8.9mn t/yr Wheatstone LNG project. The facility's platform about 225km offshore WA was taken off line around 12:00 local time (04:00 GMT) on 26 March, leading the company to suspend LNG and domestic gas output.

One of Gorgon's three trains located on Barrow Island, further north from the onshore Wheatstone plant, has also been affected by an outage which began at 15:00 local time on 26 March. The other two production trains and Gorgon's domestic gas facility continue to operate.

Australian independent Woodside Energy, which operates two LNG terminals at its 14.3mn t/yr North West Shelf (NWS) and 4.9mn t/yr Pluto projects, said output has been interrupted at the Karratha Gas Plant, NWS LNG's onshore production facility.

Production continues at its 200 TJ/d Macedon gas plant and at Pluto, a spokesperson said, with domestic gas continuing to flow to customers from its WA portfolio and the company working to mobilise its workforce to reach offshore facilities.

Transport delays travelling to the city of Karratha are delaying some staff from accessing offshore platforms and sites, Argus understands.

The ports of Ashburton, Cape Preston West, Dampier and Varanus Island operated by Pilbara Ports remain closed as of 10:00 local time.

The now-category 3 Narelle remains a dangerous system generating sustained winds of up to 155 km/h. It is located 90km southwest of the town of Exmouth and has continued to move southwesterly at 20 km/h.

Narelle is expected weaken further as it moves over land to the southeast by 28 March, the Bureau of Meteorology said at 10:00 local time, with heavy rains expected to fall in WA's southwest.


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