Shell Joins Qatar's LNG Expansion Mega-Project

Reuters
Tuesday, July 5, 2022

QatarEnergy on Tuesday signed a deal with Shell for the Gulf state's North Field East expansion, the first phase of the world's largest liquefied natural gas (LNG) project, following agreements with TotalEnergies, Exxon, ConocoPhillips, and Eni.

Shell will take a 6.25% stake in the North Field East expansion project, QatarEnergy CEO Saad al-Kaabi told a news conference.

TotalEnergies and Exxon will also hold 6.25% stakes.

Shell is the final oil major to partner with QatarEnergy in the first and largest phase of the nearly $30 billion expansion which will boost Qatar's position as the world's top LNG exporter 

The partnership comes as Russia went ahead and seized control of one of the world's largest LNG projects - Sakhalin-2 - in which Shell has a 27.5% minus one share stake.

Shell, which has written off the value of its Russian assets, made clear months ago it intended to quit Sakhalin-2 and has been in talks with potential buyers.

In Qatar, oil majors have been bidding for four trains - or liquefaction and purification facilities - that comprise the North Field East project.

In all, the expansion plan includes six LNG trains that will ramp up Qatar's liquefaction capacity to 126 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) from 77 by 2027.

QatarEnergy is in talks with several buyers from around the world that are eager to enter into the project, but no final decision has been made yet, Kaabi said.

"They need to demonstrate that they can give us a price that is above the market price because they would be coming onto the best project that exists in the LNG business from a cost perspective and a return perspective," he said.

The fifth and sixth trains are part of a second phase, North Field South.

The North Field is part of the world's largest gas field which Qatar shares with Iran, which calls its share South Pars.

Shell CEO Ben Van Beurden was in Doha for the signing and met with Qatar's Emir on Tuesday.

Beurden said during the news conference that Shell was still studying Russia's decree on Sakhalin-2.

Russian President Vladimir Putin last week signed a decree that seizes full control of the Sakhalin-2 gas and oil project in Russia's far east, a move that could force out Shell as well as Japanese companies Mitsui & Co 8031.T and Mitsubishi Corp 8058.T.

Beurden told reporters it was too early to discuss specific plans to compensate for any loss from Sakhalin but that it was important to note that with 64 million tonnes of production, Shell had multiple opportunities to manage portfolio changes.

"We have multiple supply points for multiple destinations. We optimize this to great effect..We can take some of these risks on our own books," he said.

"As to whether we will need to use this in the case of Sakhalin Energy, that remains to be seen. But I have no concerns that we can manage the situation very well."

(Reuters - Reporting by Andrew Mills, writing by Maha El Dahan; editing by Jason Neely and Louise Heavens)

Categories: Energy Middle East Industry News Activity

Related Stories

ONGC Hires Consortium to Deliver FEED Work for Bay of Bengal Oil Field

PTTEP Hires McDermott for Gas Job Offshore Malaysia

Mermaid Sets Up Subsea Services JV in Vietnam

Petronas Signs Gas PSCs for BIGST and Tembakau Clusters Offshore Malaysia

ONE Guyana FPSO for ExxonMobil’s Yellowtail Field Leaves Drydock in Singapore

Baron Oil Schedules Site Survey at Timor-Leste Gas Field

QatarEnergy and Petronet Sign 20-Year LNG Supply Deal for India

CNOOC’s Oil Field in Bohai Sea Starts Production

Nebula Energy Acquires Majority Stake in AG&P LNG for $300M

QatarEnergy Signs 15-year LNG Supply Deal with Excelerate Energy

Current News

Unique Group Acquires Subsea Innovation

ConocoPhillips Misses Quarterly Profit Estimates

Taliban Plan Regional Energy Trade Hub with Russian Oil in Mind

Russia Shipping Oil to North Korea Above UN Mandated Levels

Yinson Completes $1.3B Financing for Agogo FPSO

Sapura Energy Hooks Subsea Services Contract from Thai Oil Major Off Malaysia

Philippines' PXP Energy Eyes Petroleum Blocks in Non-Disputed Areas

BP Suspends Production at Azerbaijani Platform for Maintenance Works

SOVs – Analyzing Current, Future Demand Drivers

Decarbonization Offshore O&G: Navigating the Path Forward

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com