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APLNG gas output rebounds in 2023-24: Origin

  • Market: Electricity, Natural gas
  • 31/07/24

The 9mn t/yr Australia Pacific LNG (APLNG) project in Queensland state produced and sold more LNG in the 2023-24 fiscal year to 30 June than the previous year, upstream operator Australian independent Origin Energy said in its April-June results.

APLNG's 2023-24 output totalled 694PJ (18.53bn m³) or 3pc higher than a year earlier when it produced 674PJ, while sales of 665PJ were also 3pc up on 2022-23's 645PJ. APLNG's guidance for the year was 680-710PJ.

The 2022-23 fiscal year was affected by cumulative wet weather that Origin said cut APLNG's output from 693PJ in 2021-22.

This improved result was because of well and field optimisation Origin said, offset by the stranding of an LNG carrier at APLNG's wharf in Gladstone harbour last November that led to a temporary fall in gas production.

APLNG exported 127PJ (2.29mn t) of LNG through 33 cargoes for April-June, 4pc down from 132PJ and 34 cargoes the previous quarter and 1pc down on the 128PJ and 33 cargoes shipped in April-June 2023. APLNG delivered 15 spot cargoes in 2023-24, up from seven the previous year.

Total LNG sales for 2023-24 from APLNG were 503PJ, up from 495PJ a year earlier, with 130 cargoes up from 128 in 2022-23.

The project's average realised LNG price for 2023-24 was $11.85/mn Btu, down by 17pc from $14.20/mn Btu a year earlier. APLNG provided Origin with A$1.367bn ($888mn) in cash distributions for 2023-24, net of Origin's oil hedging.

The average National Electricity Market spot price for April-June was A$134/MWh, up by 14pc from A$118/MWh a year earlier, Origin said, with its 2,880MW Eraring coal-fired power station's output for 2023-24 up by 2.1TWh on 2022-23 to 14.3TWh.

Eraring, which will now run at least two years longer than expected following a deal with the state government, benefited from the A$125/t coal price cap during 2023-24. Its weighted-average coal price is expected to be A$30/t higher in 2024-25, Origin said.

Origin Energy results
Apr-Jun '24Jan-Mar '24Apr-Jun '23y-o-y % ±q-o-q % ±
Production (PJ)175176176-1-1
Sales (PJ)17716816575
Commodity revenue (A$mn)2,6022,3032,47152
Average realised LNG price ($/mn Btu)11.7012.1712.24-4-4
Average realised domestic gas price (A$/GJ)9.306.906.793735

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31/07/24

US Fed holds rate, signals possible September cut

US Fed holds rate, signals possible September cut

Houston, 31 July (Argus) — The US Federal Reserve kept its target interest rate unchanged at a 23-year high today while signaling a September rate cut "could be on the table" if inflation continues on its easing trajectory. The Fed's Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) held the federal funds target rate unchanged at 5.25-5.5pc. The Fed has held rates unchanged since July 2023 after hiking them by 5.25 percentage points from March 2022 in the steepest course of hikes in four decades. "We're getting closer to the point at which it will be appropriate to begin to dial back restriction," Fed chairman Jerome Powell said after the meeting. "If we get the data that we hope we get, a reduction in the policy rate could be on the table at the September meeting." The decision to keep rates steady was widely expected. Following today's meeting, the FedWatch tool, which tracks fed funds futures trading, projected an 81.6pc probability of a quarter point cut at the September FOMC meeting and an 18.2pc chance of a half point cut, compared with 86.3pc chance of a quarter point cut and a 13.2pc probability of a half point cut a day earlier. The Fed has been battling to rein in inflation, which saw the consumer price index surge to a four-decade high of 9.1pc in June 2022 because of supply chain disruptions caused by the global economic reopening following the Covid-19 pandemic.The Fed's favorite inflation gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index, fell to an annual 2.5pc in June, close to the Fed's long range target of 2pc. The unemployment rate has risen to 4.1pc in June from 3.5pc in July last year. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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India's Chhara LNG terminal again delays commissioning


30/07/24
News
30/07/24

India's Chhara LNG terminal again delays commissioning

Mumbai, 30 July (Argus) — Indian state-run HPCL has further delayed the commissioning of its 5mn t/yr Chhara LNG import terminal to November-December, depending on weather conditions, a company official said during an investor call on 30 July. This is the second delay this year after the firm failed to unload a 160,000m³ commissioning cargo from the Maran Gas Mystras carrier in April because of sea swells above the permissible limit, the company said in its May call. The vessel was left stranded for over a week as it could not moor because of rough weather and the lack of a breakwater at the terminal, a source close to the matter told Argus . The distressed cargo was later bought by Indian state-controlled refiner IOC . The latest delay at Chhara could be extended further, considering the troubles that HPCL has faced, traders said. HPCL had said in May that the terminal was expected to be commissioned in October . The facility is currently closed owing to the monsoon and HPCL is also building the breakwater, which is required to ensure safe tanker berthing during the rainy season. The firm expects to complete the work by the next fiscal year starting in April 2025, it said today. Once commissioned, regasified LNG from the terminal will be transported along a 40km pipeline to Gundala village in Gujarat, which connects to gas transport firm Gujarat State Petronet's distribution network. The firm aims to sign long-term LNG contracts with international suppliers as it aims to feed regasified LNG to its own refineries, the firm said, adding that its captive gas use is around 1.5mn t. This would be beyond the LNG requirements of other firms booking import vessels to be unloaded at the terminal. Chhara LNG was initially expected to be commissioned in September 2022 . The terminal is the country's eighth LNG import facility, and will lift total regasification capacity to 52.7mn t/yr from 47.7mn t/yr once operational. By Rituparna Ghosh Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Marine biodiesel demand slips in Rotterdam 2Q sales


30/07/24
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30/07/24

Marine biodiesel demand slips in Rotterdam 2Q sales

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Mideast contagion risk increases


29/07/24
News
29/07/24

Mideast contagion risk increases

Dubai, 29 July (Argus) — The risk of Israel's war with the Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza spreading into the wider Middle East region appeared to step up a notch at the weekend with Jerusalem saying it is preparing for fighting on its northern border with Lebanon. The move, announced by the Israeli Defence Force (IDF), came after Israel pinned a 27 July rocket attack that killed 12 people in the Golan Heights on Lebanon-based Hezbollah — like Hamas, an Iran-backed group. The IDF said it is "greatly increasing its readiness for the next stage of fighting in the north." The White House also blamed Hezbollah for the strike, saying its was "their rocket, and launched from an area they control." Israel and Hezbollah have exchanged fire almost daily since 8 October last year, a day after Hamas first attacked Israel. Those skirmishes had mostly targeted military sites, but the weekend strike was by far the deadliest on civilians inside Israeli territory. The prospect of violence spreading in the Middle East has been a concern, not least in Washington, since the war began between Hamas and Israel. On 13 April, Iran attacked Israel directly for the first time and Israel retaliated five days later. The Yemen-based Houthi militant group launched a campaign of targeting commercial vessels in the Red Sea in what it said was a direct response to Israel's actions in Gaza, and recently directly hit central Tel Aviv with a drone. International crude markets did not react to the weekend's events. Ice Brent front-month crude was mostly unchanged today. Separately, Turkish President Erdogan Recep Tayyip Erdogan on 28 July increased his rhetoric against Israel, hinting at intervention in the Gaza conflict. This may put in doubt Ankara's involvement in any multinational post-war force in Gaza, a "day after" scenario the UAE and the US are attempting to work on. "We must be very strong so that Israel can't do these things to Palestine," Erdogan said in a televised speech in his hometown of Rize, where he enjoys overwhelming support. "Just as we entered Karabakh, just as we entered Libya, we might do the same to them," he said. "There is nothing we cannot do. Only we must be strong." Erdogan has adopted a more aggressive stance towards Israel since his AKP party's poor showing at municipal elections in March, with the Palestinian struggle for statehood being a key cause for his conservative Muslim support base. His comments were non-specific as to the nature of any potential Turkish involvement in Palestinian territories. In Libya and Nagorno-Karabakh, Ankara provided military hardware — especially unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) — and advisors that helped shape outcomes of both conflicts. Israel's foreign minister Israel Katz said Erdogan was following "in the footsteps of Saddam Hussein" with threats to attack Israel. "Just let him remember what happened there and how it ended," he said on X. US secretary of state Anthony Blinken on 28 July reiterated Washington's desire to prevent the conflict from escalating. "We don't want to see it spread," he said in Japan. "The best way to do that in a sustained way is to get the ceasefire in Gaza." By Bachar Halabi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Tension builds after Venezuela vote


29/07/24
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29/07/24

Tension builds after Venezuela vote

Caracas, 29 July (Argus) — Violence after polls closed in Venezuela's election late Sunday evening pointed to more uncertainty as President Nicolas Maduro seeks a third term in a race marred by harassment of the opposition and amid reimposition of US oil sanctions. One man was shot and killed at a voting center and the main coalition of parties running against Maduro denounced severe irregularities during tallies after the vote. The electoral authority (CNE) ordered some polling stations to stop transmitting vote counts to CNE headquarters in Caracas, opposition leader Delsa Solorzano said. Solorzano also said opposition witnesses had been kicked out of polling stations and denied required copies of vote tallies. "The transmission of results, of the tallies, has been paralyzed", Solorzano, the top opposition representative before CNE, said on social media. Maduro has not spoken publicly since midday in Venezuela and he has not claimed victory. Opposition candidate Edmundo Gonzalez, running in the place of blocked candidate Maria Corina Machado, said that he would defend the results. Exit polls indicated that 65.8pc of voters supported Gonzalez, with 13.5pc voting for Maduro, out of 52pc of eligible voters participating, pollster Meganalisis said. "The results are impossible to hide, the country has chosen peaceful change," Gonzalez said. The election began auspiciously, with long lines since Saturday night, uneventful voting and heavy turnouts. But nighttime brought some violence once rumors of Maduro losing the election began circulating. In addition to the one person shot at a voting center, pro-Maduro motorcycle gangs threatened polling stations and opposition members and witnesses, and some ballots have been burned, opposition representatives said. The US administration has said it would be prepared to provide guarantees for Venezuela's government leaders if Maduro loses the election and lets the winner take power. The opposition also said this week that it would move to open the energy sector to outside investment if it takes power, and the sector faces massive repairs after decades of underinvestment in its infrastructure. Maduro in the last days of the campaign touted energy plans such as signing an agreement to explore for and produce natural gas in the offshore Cocuina-Manakin fields that straddles Venezuela's maritime border with Trinidad and Tobago. Gasoline and electricity shortages continued to plague the country with some of the world's largest oil reserves throughout the campaign. By Carlos Camacho Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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