The third and newest 3.8mn t/yr liquefaction train at Indonesia's 7.6mn t/yr Tangguh LNG has been shut since 14 February owing to a technical issue, said upstream regulator SKK Migas.
The exact nature of the technical issue remains unclear, although some traders noted that flows at the third train have not been particularly high since it started up last year. But the impact of this outage is likely limited, traders said, unless the train is off line for an extended period of time.
BP shipped its first cargo from train three in October last year, with the cargo to be delivered to Indonesia's state-owned power utility PLN. BP's 75pc share of production from the third train is sold to PLN, with Japanese utility Kansai Electric taking the other 25pc.
The third Tangguh liquefaction train was initially supposed to start up in late 2019 before being delayed to the end of 2023. BP and SKK Migas were previously targeting first production in September.
But any hopes of train three boosting Indonesia's LNG spot exports are likely thin. SKK Migas previously announced that Tangguh's third train will likely increase the country's overall LNG exports in 2024, but potential for additional spot sales will be limited.