Environmental Group Backs Out of Scarborough Litigation

Monday, August 19, 2024

Woodside and the Australian Conservation Foundation (ACF) have agreed to dismiss the ACF’s challenge to a primary environmental approval for Woodside’s Scarborough Energy Project.

The Scarborough Energy Project has all primary environmental approvals in place and offshore work is progressing well. However, the Federal Court proceedings sought an injunction to stop offshore activities for the project.

Woodside CEO Meg O’Neill welcomed the agreement to dismiss the case.

“Litigation against energy projects like Scarborough is an ineffective way to pursue solutions to global climate and energy challenges. Such approaches create needless uncertainty for businesses, communities and the people who depend on the energy these projects produce.

“The Scarborough reservoir contains less than 0.1% carbon dioxide and combined with processing design efficiencies will be one of the lowest carbon intensity sources of LNG delivered into north Asian markets.”

The ACF issued a statement saying it has made the difficult decision not to proceed with our upcoming legal case against Woodside’s Scarborough project. “Late last week it became apparent that the case was unlikely to succeed.  

“The reality is that Australia’s laws work in favor of fossil fuel interests. There is still no explicit requirement for climate damage to be considered under our key national nature law, the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act. This means that, even today, major fossil fuel projects are being approved that will lock in huge volumes of carbon pollution well beyond 2050.

“While the science is crystal clear that coal and gas warm our planet, the weak nature protection laws do not reflect this reality.”

The ACF, represented by the Environmental Defenders Office, commenced the Federal Court of Australia proceedings in relation to the offshore environmental assessment of the Scarborough Energy Project in June 2022.

The Scarborough Energy Project comprises the Scarborough Joint Venture, the Pluto Train 2 Joint Venture and modifications to Pluto Train 1 to process Scarborough gas. The Scarborough field is located in the Carnarvon Basin, approximately 375km off the Pilbara coast of Western Australia. It will be developed through new offshore facilities connected by an approximately 430km pipeline to Pluto Train 2 at the existing Pluto LNG onshore facility.

It will include the installation of a floating production unit (FPU) with eight wells drilled in the initial phase and 13 wells drilled over the life of the Scarborough gas field. All wells will be tied back to a semi-submersible FPU moored in 950m of water. Approximately five million tonnes per annum (Mtpa) of Scarborough gas will be processed through Pluto Train 2, with up to 3Mtpa processed through the existing Pluto Train 1.

The Scarborough Energy Project was 67% complete at the end of June 2024 and is on track to deliver the first LNG cargo in 2026.

Categories: Offshore LNG Industry News Oil and Gas

Related Stories

Oil Rises as Iran Denies US Talks, Supply Risks Persist

US Oil Shield Starts Showing Cracks as Iran War Drives Prices Higher

IEA Unleashes Record 400M Barrel Oil Stockpile Release Amid Iran War Disruptions

Governments Move to Shield Economies as Oil Jumps 25%

Oil Prices Go Up 3% as Iran Crisis Disrupts Supply

Inpex Eyes Mid-Year Bids for $21B Indonesia LNG Project

MISC Secures Long-Term Charter for Papua New Guinea's First FSO

Mubadala Hires SLB for Deepwater Drilling Services Offshore Indonesia

Japan's Mitsui in Advanced Talks for Stake in Qatar’s North Field LNG Project

Petrovietnam Agrees First-Ever LNG Term Deal with Shell

Current News

Eni Exits Consortium for Oil and Gas Exploration Offshore Israel

Big Oil to Reap Billions from Energy Price Surge

UAE Stands Ready to Join Force to Reopen Strait of Hormuz

Asian Buyers Rush for Russian Oil Amid Supply Disruption

Mubadala Energy Secures Southwest Andaman Exploration Block off Indonesia

Strohm to Supply Insulated TCP Jumpers for Malaysia’s Offshore Project

Arabian Drilling Flags Temporary Offshore Rig Suspensions in Persian Gulf

Iran War Sends LNG Prices Soaring, Curbing Asia Demand

Rising Costs of War: Gulf Energy Infrastructure Stares Down $25B Repair Bill

ADES Expects Up to 44% Earnings Rise Despite Regional Tensions Impacting Rigs

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