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Australia’s MinRes unveils oil, gas reserves estimates

  • Spanish Market: Natural gas
  • 16/09/24

Diversified Australian mining firm Mineral Resources (MinRes) has released an initial oil and gas reserves estimates for its onshore Perth basin assets in Western Australia (WA) state.

MinRes' best estimate contingent (2C) reserves for its Lockyer gas prospect totals 435PJ (1.62bn m³) of sales gas and 3.3mn bl of condensate, the firm said on 16 September, with the resource located on state exploration permits 368 and 426.

The Erregulla oil project holds 2C reserves of 31.6mn bl of oil equivalent (boe) and is as one of the largest onshore discoveries since Chevron's Barrow Island field in 1964, MinRes said.

An analyst note from Australian equities research firm E&P on 16 September valued the resource at about A$500mn, saying that given MinRes has flagged a review of development and partnering opportunities a full asset sale would be unsurprising. The note suggested Australian independent Beach Energy and Japanese trading firm Mitsui could be interested, considering the firms' partnership in the 250 TJ/d Waitsia project which has a reserve life of around 10-11 years.

The 2C resource would support about five years of production at 250 TJ/d, while a 160 TJ/d plant would produce for about 7.5 years, E&P said. The strong flow rates of about 80-105 TJ/d suggests fewer wells would be needed and development costs could be reduced.

As a major lithium and iron ore producer, the miner has challenged the WA government's onshore gas export ban, previously saying that sanctioning a 250 TJ/d plant for the site depends on it receiving permits to export 85pc of the gas as LNG.

Exports of gas from onshore basins should only proceed once the domestic WA market is well-supplied, a parliamentary committee report last month suggested. This comes ahead of expected [annual shortfalls into the 2030s] (https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2518646) as the state shuts down its coal-fired power stations.


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10/10/24

Hurricane Milton leaves 3.4mn in the dark

Hurricane Milton leaves 3.4mn in the dark

New York, 10 October (Argus) — About 3.4mn customers in Florida were without power this morning after Hurricane Milton pummeled the state with heavy rainfall and strong winds. Utility crews began the process of assessing and repairing the damage caused by the hurricane which tore down trees and downed power lines after slamming into Florida's west coast as a powerful Category 3 hurricane late Wednesday. Florida Power & Light had about 1.2mn homes and businesses without electricity, Duke Energy reported about 875,000 outages, while about 592,000 customers of Tampa Electric were affected, according to independent tracker Poweroutage.us. Milton, which has since weakened to a category 1 storm with maximum sustained winds of 85mph, is now moving off the east coast of Florida. "On the forecast track, the center of Milton will continue to move away from Florida and pass to the north of the Bahamas today," according to the National Hurricane Center. The risk of life-threatening storm surge remains on the eastern coast of Florida, while hurricane-force winds are expected to linger for a few more hours. Major flooding as a result of heavy rainfall also continues to pose a threat. A recovery in road fuel supplies, which were strained by the pre-storm evacuation of hundreds of thousands of residents, will depend on the extent of power, roadway and port outages. The state has waived statutes regulating the sale, storage and distribution of liquid fuels . By Stephen Cunningham Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US inflation slows to 2.4pc in Sep, less than forecast


10/10/24
10/10/24

US inflation slows to 2.4pc in Sep, less than forecast

Houston, 10 October (Argus) — US inflation slowed slightly less than expected in September, but still came in at the lowest annual rate since February 2021, in the first major inflation report since the Federal Reserve started cutting interest rates last month. The headline consumer price index (CPI) eased to an annual 2.4pc in September, down from 2.5pc in August, according to the Labor Department. The decline was less than the 2.3pc forecast in a survey of economists by Trading Economics. Excluding volatile food and energy, so-called core inflation rose by 3.3pc following a 3.2pc gain in the prior period, also slightly less than forecast. Today's report is the final CPI report ahead of the next Federal Reserve policy decision on 7 November and it follows a much stronger than expected employment report for September, which together could prompt the Fed to move more cautiously. Still, CPI has come down sharply from its peak of 9.1pc in mid-2022 and, despite aggressive Fed tightening, hiring has continued at a healthy rate and the overall economic expansion remains on track, partly thanks to falling energy prices. The energy index contracted by an annual 6.8pc in September after a 1.8pc contraction through August. The food index rose by an annual 2.3pc following a 2.1pc gain in the prior period. Transportation services rose by 8.5pc. Within energy, the gasoline index fell by 15.3pc after a 10.3pc decline in the prior period. Energy services rose by 3.4pc after a 3.1pc gain. Natural gas services rose by 2pc. Shelter rose by 4.9pc after a 5.2pc gain. Transportation services rose by 8.5pc following a 7.9pc gain. Auto insurance was up 16.3pc. On a monthly basis, CPI rose by 0.2pc in September, matching gains in August and July, Labor said. Shelter rose by 0.2pc and food increase by 0.4pc, together accounting for over 75pc of the monthly headline increase, Labor said. The energy index declined by 1.9pc over the month, after falling by 0.8pc the prior month . By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Strike starts at Chevron Australia's LNG sites: Update


10/10/24
10/10/24

Strike starts at Chevron Australia's LNG sites: Update

Adds comment from Altrad spokesperson in paragraph 3 Sydney, 10 October (Argus) — Members of Australian LNG workers' union the Offshore Alliance (OA) that are employed by companies owned by engineering firm Altrad are undertaking protected industrial action (PIA) at Chevron Australia's two LNG facilities. About 140 gas maintenance workers began rolling stoppages and work bans today because of dissatisfaction with negotiations for a new enterprise bargaining agreement, the OA said. The PIA can occur for 30 days from when the results of a union members' ballot was declared on 2 October, and may be extended if agreed by the Fair Work Commission. Altrad remains committed to the continuing bargaining process, a spokesperson for the firm said on 10 October, promising to "continue to seek an equitable outcome to negotiations" in the interests of employees and Altrad. Workers are demanding union rates and conditions on every offshore and onshore oil and gas facility, the OA said, promising to push back against baseline workplace agreements presently in place. Striking staff include technicians, scaffolders, riggers, painters and plasterers working for Altrad at the Chevron's 8.9mn t/yr Wheatstone LNG and 15.6mn t/yr Gorgon LNG facilities in Western Australia state, as well as Wheatstone's offshore platform. Chevron Australia is aware Altrad employees have started industrial action, but said no impact to production are expected. "Given the nature of the work undertaken by Altrad and the mitigations in place, it is not anticipated there will be any impact to LNG and domestic gas production nor to any critical business activities at our facilities," a Chevron spokesperson said on 10 October. The dispute comes almost 12 months after Chevron reached an agreement with the OA — formed by the Australian Workers' Union and Maritime Union of Australia — on three deals regarding pay and conditions at its LNG terminals and upstream facilities. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Altrad Australia's workers strike at Chevron LNG sites


10/10/24
10/10/24

Altrad Australia's workers strike at Chevron LNG sites

Sydney, 10 October (Argus) — Members of Australian LNG workers' union the Offshore Alliance (OA) that are employed by companies owned by engineering firm Altrad are undertaking protected industrial action at Chevron Australia's two LNG facilities. About 140 gas maintenance workers began rolling stoppages and work bans today because of dissatisfaction with negotiations for a new enterprise bargaining agreement, the OA said. The workers include technicians, electrical and instrumentation technicians, scaffolders, riggers, painters and plasterers working for Altrad at the Chevron's 8.9mn t/yr Wheatstone LNG and 15.6mn t/yr Gorgon LNG facilities in Western Australia state, as well as Wheatstone's offshore platform. Chevron Australia is aware employees have started industrial action, a spokesperson said. But the firm does not anticipate any impact to LNG and domestic gas production or any critical business activities, given the nature of the work undertaken by Altrad and mitigations in place. Altrad was contacted for comment, but has yet to respond. Workers are demanding union rates and conditions on every offshore and onshore oil and gas facility, the OA said, promising to push back against baseline workplace agreements presently in place. The dispute comes almost 12 months after Chevron reached an agreement with the OA — formed by the Australian Workers' Union and Maritime Union of Australia — on three deals regarding pay and conditions at the LNG terminals and upstream facilities. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Hurricane Milton closes in on Florida: Update


09/10/24
09/10/24

Hurricane Milton closes in on Florida: Update

New York, 9 October (Argus) — Strong winds and heavy rainfall are lashing Florida's west coast ahead of Hurricane Milton, which is forecast to make landfall late tonight as a major hurricane. The growing risk of life-threatening storm surge and flooding have sparked mass evacuations given Milton's potential to be one of the most destructive hurricanes on record to strike the region. Multiple tornado warnings have also been issued across the Florida peninsula. Milton was located about 100 miles southwest of Tampa at 4pm ET today, packing maximum sustained winds of 125mph, according to the National Hurricane Center. It was moving to the northeast at 17 mph. "On the forecast track, the center of Milton will make landfall along the west-central coast of Florida tonight, cross the Florida peninsula overnight and early Thursday, and move off the east coast of Florida over the western Atlantic Ocean on Thursday," the center said. Milton is expected to remain at hurricane strength as it sweeps over the Florida peninsula, before gradually weakening as it moves back out to sea. Fuel supplies, prices tighten Mandatory evacuations for hundreds of thousands of west coast Florida residents led to a fuel shortages in some areas ahead of the storm. The state waived four statutes regulating fuel sales, storage and distribution to shore up supplies and has been escorting fuel trucks to retail stations that have run dry. Prices for Florida CBOB delivered at Tampa and Port Everglades fell by 0.75¢/USG to $2.08/USG today, down from their highest point since mid-August on Monday at $2.18/USG. Cash differentials were stable in the gasoline cargo markets at Argus Gulf coast Colonial CBOB +10¢/USG. Florida ultra-low sulphur diesel (ULSD) delivered to Port Everglades fell by 2.23¢/USG to $2.30/USG today. Cash differentials were unchanged in the waterborne ULSD cargo markets at Argus Gulf coast Colonial ULSD +12.25¢/USG. Milton's storm surge and destructive winds in the Tampa area have the potential to significantly damage a key import hub from which refined products are sent by pipeline to the Orlando area and distributed by truck throughout the state. If terminals at the port are quick to reopen, blocked roads and flooding could prohibit fuel truck deliveries to gas stations that may not even have power. The offshore oil and natural gas hub in the Gulf of Mexico was largely spared as Milton's track took it well south of most platforms. By Stephen Cunningham, Stephanie Crawford, Cooper Sukaly and Nathan Risser Hurricane Milton projected path Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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