coal seam gas – Michmutters
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Senex Energy announces plans for a $1 billion expansion of its Surat Basin gas project

Queensland’s Surat Basin may be home to the state’s main coal seam gas region but it could be about to get a whole lot bigger.

Senex Energy, which is owned by Gina Rinehart’s Hancock Energy and South Korean steel maker Posco, has announced a $1 billion expansion of its natural gas developments in the Surat Basin, which includes hydraulic fracturing, or fracking.

The expansion, which still needs approval from federal Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek, will increase the company’s gas production to 60 petajoules (PJ) per year from the end of 2025.

Producing enough electricity to power more than 2.7 million homes each year, it is equivalent to more than 10 per cent of the east coast’s annual domestic gas requirements.

In a speech to industry leaders in Brisbane on Thursday, federal Resources Minister Madeleine King urged them to expand amid warnings a gas shortage could lead to higher prices.

“More supply of gas is a good thing in the domestic market and for the international markets,” Ms King said.

“We want to have a sustainable and ongoing system of gas supply for the domestic market, while also honoring the arrangements companies have in place and Australia has in place with our international partners.”

Filling domestic demand

According to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s (ACCC) interim report of its inquiry into gas supply, there is a significant risk to the east coast’s energy security in 2023.

Two men walk through gas pipes
Resources Minister Madeleine King is encouraging gas production expansions.(Supplied: Senex Energy)

“The outlook for 2023 is very concerning and is likely to place further upward pressure on prices, which could result in some commercial and industrial users no longer being able to operate,” the report said.

“Liquified natural gas (LNG) exporters are expected to contribute to the shortfall in 2023 by withdrawing 58PJ more gas from the domestic market than they expect to supply into the market.”

An ‘obligation’ to Asia

Senex Energy chief executive Ian Davies said the supply would be mostly directed to the domestic market.

“[The] majority is absolutely domestic, but we do have an obligation, which we take quite seriously, [in] supporting our Asian neighbors to decarbonise and provide energy security,” he said.

“We have an [international] supply arrangement with Gladstone LNG for a minority of that 60PJ.

“We’re fundamentally a domestic company focused on a domestic supply.”

Two men sit at a table
Senex Energy CEO Ian Davies [R] says the project will create 50 ongoing jobs.(Supplied: Senex Energy)

Landowners ‘deeply concerned’

Senex said its expansion would create 200 jobs during construction at its Atlas and Roma North projects, and 50 ongoing roles, and inject $200 million into the region’s economies.

But property owners in Queensland’s south-west have already felt the impact of gas wells in their backyard.

Ellie Smith of the Lock the Gate Alliance said she was “deeply concerned” about the impact of Senex’s proposed expansion.

“We don’t believe that will have any impact on prices that Queenslanders are facing with this gas price crisis,” she said.

“We’re seeing gas exported overseas when we need it at home, and the only way that we can bring energy prices down is by supporting manufacturers and Australians to shift to renewables.

“What we need to see the federal government do is put in place the gas price caps and the gas trigger to keep more gas onshore to really combat this predatory behavior by the gas industry, so we can see prices come down and protect our farmland and not open new areas to gas fields.”

The ACCC’s interim report recommended the government consider intervening in the market by pulling what’s known as the “gas trigger” to ensure there was enough supply.

Filling a supply shortfall

Queensland Resources Council chief executive Ian Macfarlane said the proposed expansion would pick up the shortfall from Australia’s southern states.

A man stands at a lecture, with a screen behind him that reads the Hon Ian Macfarlane MP
Ian Macfarlane claims the expansion will pick up the shortfall from other states.(AAP: Lukas Coch)

“It is a significant step by Senex in terms of helping this shortage of supply in Victoria and New South Wales,” he said.

“The shortage has come about because Victoria does not explore for [unconventional] gas onshore and New South Wales as a gas industry has been tied up by red and green type.

He said it would set some “certainty about supply in the future”.

“Spot prices are spot prices, and the actual supply of gas today and tomorrow will continue to be affected by the fact that the Victorians and New South Welshmen have not developed their own supply and gas is short globally.”

Potential price drop

Mr Macfarlane said consumers could expect a price drop in coming years as certainty returned to the domestic market.

“there will be a continuation of higher prices in the short term, but with the hope and certainty of lower prices going forward,” he said.

“It’ll be very strong interest and coming from domestic buyers, both here in Queensland and also in southern states.

“Industries such as brickworks, glass making, but also of course, power generation — there’s a whole range of industry that relies on gas, and there’ll be very strong competition in the market for it.”

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Business

Santos takes ownership of Hunter Gas Pipeline to get Narrabri gas to domestic market

Energy giant Santos has acquired a company which has plans for a gas pipeline near its controversial Narrabri Gas Project.

Hunter Gas Pipeline has planning approval for a pipeline from the Wallumbilla Gas Hub in southern Queensland to Newcastle, via Narrabri.

Santos said the pipeline provided a way for the company to deliver its gas to the domestic market, provided planning authorities approved a short connection.

Santos midstream and clean fuels president Brett Woods said the company expected construction of the pipeline would begin in 2024.

“Acquiring the Hunter Gas Pipeline route is an important step for the Narrabri project,” Mr Woods said.

“Our Narrabri project … will inject new supply into southern domestic markets and put downward pressure on gas prices.”

The company claims the Narrabri project, which was approved by state and federal authorities in 2020, could supply up to half of New South Wales’s gas needs.

landholder frustration

A route for the Hunter Gas Pipeline has not been finalized, but has been narrowed down to a 200-meter wide corridor.

Quirindi landholder Peter Wills, who has campaigned against construction of the pipeline for several years, said there was limited dialogue with the prior owner, since the pipeline was first approved in 2009.

Liverpool Plains
The underground pipeline would run through the Liverpool Plains, which contain some of the most productive agricultural land in the country.(7.30)

“All the landholders are in the dark. They’ve not had any contact,” Mr Wills said.

“That’s not consultation.”

Meg Bowman, from the Hunter Gas Landholder Rights Alliance, said her group would continue to advocate for specific improvements.

“It should go down highway and expressway corridors or the rail corridor,” she said.

“That would alleviate the imposition on landholders’ private property.”

Santos has left open the possibility of changing the route to assuage landholder concerns.

“There is room to make further improvements as needed,” Mr Woods said.

Construction on the pipeline must commence by October 2024 to avoid its approval lapses.

Mr Wills said if Santos intends to build the pipeline, landholder consultation must improve urgently.

“Santos is really on the clock here with two years to go.

Sale price kept secret

Hunter Gas Pipeline Managing Director Garbis Simonian said the sale would fast track gas being piped to the domestic market.

“Santos are the ones that can bring gas to market the fastest because they have a gas field and they have experience in the construction of gas pipelines,” he said.

“It was our belief that the best outcome for New South Wales was to do this sale.”

The final cost of the project will be more than one billion dollars, with stage one previously valued at $700 million.

But he would not disclose the sale price.

“I am not at liberty to say that but all I can say is that we’re happy and we have structured a deal where we are sort of partnering with them, all of our shareholders are happy and that is the main thing,” he said.

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