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Gladstone moves ahead with port expansion

  • : Coal, Coking coal, Metals, Natural gas, Petroleum coke
  • 15/01/06

Australia's Gladstone coal and LNG port has begun technical work on the duplication of its shipping channel to allow for increased exports.

The Queensland port is moving forward with the project, despite concerns that coal and LNG output may not increase in Australia beyond what is already being built. The project also faces significant environmental opposition after a previous dredging programme was found to have caused major damage to fish populations. Gladstone is on the edge of the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area, which is a highly environmentally sensitive area.

Without the expansion Gladstone will face shipping delays, safety risks and congestion in the existing channel, according to Gladstone Port Corporation chief executive Craig Doyle. But the port can cope with the predicted shipping demand over the next five years from existing and soon to be completed industrial projects in the region, he added. These include three LNG export projects with a total capacity of 24.2mn t/yr and the 27mn t/yr Wiggins Island Coal Export Terminal (Wicet), which is due to come on stream in March. These projects could take Gladstone's throughput to more than 150mn t/yr, which is above the current channel's capacity of 140mn t/yr, although depressed coal markets may keep total shipments within the single channel capacity.

Gladstone appears to only be moving ahead slowly with the channel duplication in the face of major environmental and community opposition, implying that the port authority no longer expects a quick improvement in the coal market or speedy approvals of additional trains at the three LNG projects. The Queensland state government has granted an extension to its major project status to June 2016 and the environmental impact statement preparation will take 12 months to complete.

Gladstone has capacity to export 140mn t/yr without the channel duplication and exported 98.3mn t/yr in the year to 30 June 2014, including 69.6mn t of coal. About a third of Gladstone's coal exports are thermal coal, just under half is hard coking coal and the rest is semi-soft coking coal. The port shipped 5.9mn t of coal in November, which equates to an annualised rate of 70.8mn t. Gladstone has the capacity to ship 75mn t/yr of coal, not including the new 27mn t/yr Wicet.

The two-train 7.8mn t/yr Gladstone LNG venture operated by Australian independent Santos and the two-train 9mn t/yr Australia Pacific LNG (APLNG) project will come on stream later this year. Origin operates the upstream part of APLNG, with ConocoPhillips operating the downstream part. UK energy firm BG's 8.5mn t/yr QCLNG project shipped its first LNG cargo yesterday.

joc/rjd



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