Papua New Guinea signals backing of LNG deal
Papua New Guinea signaled it was backing a previously agreed liquefied natural gas (LNG) deal with French oil major Total SA, although it said that some terms still needed negotiating.
The deal, for a project called Papua LNG, was agreed in April but put up for review after the prime minister who signed it was ousted in a parliamentary vote in May, following a political crisis caused by discontent over the distribution of resource riches.
Petroleum Minister Kerenga Kua, who was appointed to the portfolio in June by new Prime Minister James Marape, said his government “in principle” stood behind the project.
Papua LNG, a joint venture between Total, Exxon Mobil Corp and Australia’s Oil Search Ltd, is part of a $13 billion project set to double the country’s exports of LNG.
“However, the state has reserved its rights to discuss a shortlist of matters to be discussed with the developers,” Kua said in an e-mailed statement.
“We believe that what we have discussed and agreed to are favorable and will not affect the general economics and fiscal terms of the Papua LNG Gas Agreement.”
He added that finalizing the details should not take more than two weeks.
Reporting by Tom Westbrook; Writing by Lidia Kelly; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell
- ADNOC Gas awards $2.1 B in contracts to enhance LNG supply infrastructure
- U.S. Department of the Treasury releases final rules for clean hydrogen production tax credit
- Tecnimont to build waste-to-biogas plant to fuel local kitchens in India
- Indonesia regulator confirms disruption at bp's Tangguh LNG project
- Topsoe, Aramco sign JDA to advance low-carbon hydrogen solutions using eREACT™
Comments