LNG tanker floats off Australian waters as Ichthys ramps up output
A tanker carrying liquefied natural gas (LNG) has been floating off Australian waters for nearly two weeks as production at Ichthys project ramps up, industry sources said.
The tanker ‘Symphonic Breeze’ has been moored at Darwin anchorage since April 17 after loading a cargo from the recently launched Ichthys LNG facility, shipping data from Refinitiv Eikon showed.
The LNG cargo has already been sold to a North Asian buyer, who chose to lift it at a later date due to high inventory in its tanks, an industry source familiar with the matter said.
The “floating cargo” situation has been partly created due to ample global supply with several new projects expected to launch LNG exports this year, including Royal Dutch Shell’s Prelude floating terminal that started production late last year in Australia, and as demand remained largely stable, industry sources said.
The delivery period for the cargo was quite wide, the source added.
Production from Ichthys in western Australia has also been ramping up and adding to the glut, the sources added.
“Ichthys production is very strong, which is causing a bit of headache for the market given the current situation,” the first source added.
A spokesman from Japanese firm Inpex, the operator of the project, told Reuters that Ichthys is ramping up output, but did not specify the production level.
LNG exports from Ichthys are expected to reach a record high of up to 680,000 tonnes in April, the equivalent of about 91 percent of the nameplate capacity, said Madeleine Overgaard, an LNG market analyst with data intelligence firm Kpler.
The $40 billion Ichthys project shipped its first condensate and LNG cargoes in October last year after several delays and cost overruns.
At full operation, Ichthys is expected to produce 8.9 million tonnes of LNG a year, along with 1.7 million tonnes of LPG and about 100,000 barrels per day of condensate, an ultra-light form of crude oil.
The Ichthys LNG project is a joint venture between Inpex, oil major Total, Taiwan’s CPC Corp and the Australian subsidiaries of Japan’s Tokyo Gas, Osaka Gas , Kansai Electric Power, JERA and Toho Gas .
(Reporting by Jessica Jaganathan, additional reporting by Aaron Sheldrick in TOKYO, Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips)
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