Woodside to remedy corrosion issue at Australia's Karratha gas plant
Woodside Petroleum is rectifying a corrosion issue identified during planned maintenance at the Karratha gas plant in western Australia, a company spokesperson said.
“We have discussed with the regulator and are taking all necessary measures to ensure the ongoing safety of our people and operations,” the spokesperson told Reuters, adding there was no material impact to Woodside’s current production guidance.
The spokesperson did not provide any further details on the corrosion.
The Karratha gas plant, part of the North West Shelf (NWS) venture operated by Woodside, has an export capacity of 16.9 MMtpy, with five LNG processing trains, two domestic gas trains, six condensate stabilisation units and three LPG fractionation units.
It was not immediately clear where the corrosion occurred or how serious the issue was, but a source familiar with the matter said it could have occurred in one of the LNG production trains which had been shut for planned maintenance.
According to Woodside’s website, maintenance had been scheduled on an LNG train from June 18 to July 18 and another over Aug. 13 to Sept. 12, though it was not immediately clear if these were on separate production trains.
The NWS project, operated by Woodside, counts the Australian units of BHP Group, BP, Chevron, Shell among its part owners.
Japan Australia LNG, a joint venture between Japan’s Mitsubishi Corp and Mitsui & Co., is also a part owner of the NWS project.
- Gasum powers Equinor's platform supply vessel with bio-LNG
- Oman plans third LNG train, boosting domestic production to more than 15 MMtpy
- ADNOC deploys pioneering AI-enabled process optimization technology
- Mexico Pacific announces long-term LNG SPA with POSCO International
- ONEOK to acquire Medallion and controlling interest in EnLink for $5.9 B
Comments