Fault at Strike-hit Chevron Australia Plant Shuts 25% of Output

Renju Jose and Lewis Jackson
Thursday, September 14, 2023

A fault at Chevron's Wheatstone facility in Australia temporarily shut about a quarter of its liquefied natural gas (LNG) production on Thursday, the same day that unionized workers escalated strike action.

A Chevron spokesman said the cause of the problem had been identified and the company was working to resume full production.

It was not immediately clear if the fault was related to the strikes, which began six days ago at Wheatstone and Chevron's other Australian LNG facility, Gorgon, after talks between the company and unions over wages and work conditions broke down.

Faults and outages are not unusual at LNG plants, but the strike action could increase the time it takes to fix them, energy analyst Saul Kavonic said.

"Restarting equipment can be more labour intensive, so it can be more challenging than just maintaining operations amidst a strike," he said, adding that the lost production "shouldn't move the dial" for gas markets.

Dutch and British wholesale gas prices were lower on Thursday after rising slightly the previous day ahead of the strike escalation. NG/EU

The Offshore Alliance, a union group said on social media that a turbine tripped at one of Wheatstone's two LNG trains, which convert natural gas into liquid.

 The trains have a combined capacity of 8.9 million tonnes per annum (mtpa).

Combined with the Gorgon plant, Chevron's Australian LNG facilities account for over 5% of global supply. Analysts said the strikes posed little risk to supplies, as they are likely to be temporary, and key gas buyers also have plenty of inventory.  

"The Australian labour dispute should at best last days or weeks but not months given the common interest of keeping cash flows and remaining a reliable supplier," said Norbert Rucker, head of economics and next-generation research at Swiss wealth manager Julius Baer.

Workers on Thursday escalated what have been six days of limited strikes of up to 11 hours, and for the next two weeks they could stop work for up to 24 hours each day and refuse to do crucial work, such as loading LNG tankers.

Unions on Thursday said they will vary strikes according to "industrial strategy", targeting LNG exports in particular.

Domestic supplies will not be impacted, they said.      

Chevron had said it would continue to take steps to maintain operations if any disruptions occur, without giving details.

Research group EnergyQuest estimated revenue at risk for Chevron and partners from the strikes at about A$76 million ($49 million) per day, though it said not all of that revenue would be lost as some cargoes may be deferred to a later date.    

Australia is the world's biggest LNG exporter and its main buyers are in Asia. Traders anticipate any cuts to supplies would send Asian buyers competing with Europeans for cargo, spurring spot price volatility in the European gas market.

In a bid to stop the industrial action, Chevron is pursuing an untested legal strategy and has applied to the Fair Work Commission, Australia's industrial arbitrator, for an "intractable bargaining" declaration which, if granted, would end the strikes and allow the tribunal to dictate an agreement.

The commission will hold its first, and so far only, hearing on Sept. 22, and a decision is expected to be made soon after.


($1 = 1.5571 Australian dollars)

 (Reporting by Renju Jose and Lewis Jackson in Sydney, Florence Tan and Emily Chow in Singapore, and Nina Chestney in LondonEditing by Jamie Freed, Miral Fahmy and David Evans)



Categories: Energy LNG Industry News Activity Australia/NZ

Related Stories

MCDermott Gets Pipelines and Cables Job at Qatar's Giant Gas Field

TotalEnergies Signs LNG Supply Deal with South Korea’s HD Hyundai Chemical

Indonesia Green Lights Eni Gas Projects

A Hydrogen Balancing Act in Offshore Energy

‘World’s Largest’ Floating Wind Platform on Its Way to Offshore Site in China

Equinor Picks SHI as Preferred Supplier for Korean 750 MW Floating Wind Project

First Gas Starts Flowing at SapuraOMV’s Jerun Platform Off Malaysia

Solar, Wind Uptake to Reach 5.4 TWac from 2024 to 2033, Says Wood Mackenzie

MODEC and Terra Drone Join Forces for FPSO Drone Inspections

L&T Nets Pipeline Order from ONGC Worth Up to $300M

Current News

Impending Shortage of Jackups within Ageing Asia Pacific Fleet

Equinor Tries Again for a Japan Offshore Wind Lease

Yinson Production Concludes Minority Stake Sale in FPSO Anna Nery

Sunda Energy Pushes Back Chuditch-2 Appraisal Well Drilling Date

CNOOC Starts Production at Another Oil Field in South China Sea

ABS Takes Charge of Digital Twin Project for Petrobras’ FPSOs

Petronas to Proceed with South China Sea Oil and Gas Exploration

Fugro Names Annabelle Vos Director for Middle East & India

Korea's Hanwha Raises Offer for Singapore's Dyna-Mac Takeover

East Timor Eyes Chinese Partners for Stalled Greater Sunrise Gas Development

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