Watchdog threatens critical Browse

Original article by Colin Packham
The Australian – Page: 18 : 7-Aug-24

Woodside Energy’s CEO Meg O’Neill has emphasised the importance of the company’s Browse LNG project. She contends that Browse is the only gas field of sufficient size to meet the forecast demand for energy over the near-term. The Browse project’s future is under scrutiny following a preliminary ruling from Western Australia’s Environmental Protection Authority that it presents a "unacceptable risk" to marine ecology. The EPA is expected to make a final recommendation on the project in 2025, although it can be overruled by the federal government. O’Neill has also defended Woodside’s deal to acquire a low-carbon ammonia project in the US.

CORPORATES
WOODSIDE ENERGY GROUP LIMITED – ASX WDS, WESTERN AUSTRALIA. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AUTHORITY

EPA blocks Woodside gas project

Original article by Ben Potter, Tom Rabe, Brad Thompson
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 1 & 18 : 6-Aug-24

Western Australia’s Environmental Protection Authority has advised that it expects to release its final determination on Woodside Energy’s Browse LNG project in 2025. However, the EPA has concluded in its preliminary decision that the project’s environmental risks are "unacceptable". It is particularly concerned about the project’s impact on pygmy blue whales and green turtle nesting sites, as well as the risk of oil spills near Scott Reef, which is off the coast of Broome. WA Premier Roger Cook says his government wants Browse to proceed, arguing that it will boost the state’s gas supply and help Asian countries to decarbonise.

CORPORATES
WOODSIDE ENERGY GROUP LIMITED – ASX WDS, WESTERN AUSTRALIA. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AUTHORITY, WESTERN AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF THE PREMIER AND CABINET

Woodside swoops with US gas deal

Original article by Colin Packham
The Australian – Page: 15 & 19 : 23-Jul-24

Woodside Energy will increase its presence in the US after securing a $US1.2bn ($1.79bn) deal to acquire Tellurian, which is developing an LNG export terminal in Louisiana. Tellurian’s Driftwood terminal is expected to have annual export capacity of about 27.6 million tonnes, which is significantly higher than Woodside’s annual production in Australia. Woodside expects to make a final investment decision on the Driftwood project by the end of 2025, and says the facility could be operational before the end of this decade. Tellurian is said to have invested more than $US1bn in the project to date.

CORPORATES
WOODSIDE ENERGY GROUP LIMITED – ASX WDS, TELLURIAN INCORPORATED

Rinehart-backed Senex gas project gets go-ahead

Original article by Angela Macdonald-Smith
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 17 : 26-Jun-24

Senex Energy has belatedly received federal environmental approval for its Atlas gas project in Queensland. Senex had commenced the environmental approvals process nearly two years ago, and CEO Ian Davies stated earlier in 2024 that the ‘legislative bureaucracy’-induce delays had increased the cost of the project by more than $150m. Approval for the project has coincided with warnings from the Australian Energy Market Operator that the east coast may run out of gas. Senex is owned by Posco and Gina Rinehart’s Hancock Prospecting.

CORPORATES
SENEX ENERGY LIMITED, POSCO, HANCOCK PROSPECTING PTY LTD

Forrest blames green move for executive exodus

Original article by Rosie Lewis
The Australian – Page: 13 & 16 : 27-Feb-24

Fortescue’s executive chairman Andrew Forrest has rejected claims that the company has experienced an unusually high number of executive departures. Speaking at the National Press Club on Monday, Forrest conceded that some executives had left it because of its transition from a "fossil fuel-burning company to a green energy company", while he said its turnover was around half when compared to the mining industry as a whole. Forrest said that Fortescue’s senior management team was beginning to settle down now.

CORPORATES
FORTESCUE LIMITED – ASX FMG, NATIONAL PRESS CLUB (AUSTRALIA)

Santos gets green light on $5bn project

Original article by Colin Packham
The Australian – Page: 13 & 14 : 16-Jan-24

The Federal Court’s Justice Natalie Charlesworth has ruled that Santos will not need to revise its environmental plan for the $5.3bn Barossa LNG project in the Timor Sea. Justice Charlesworth ordered Santos to temporarily stop work on a 262km pipeline in late 2023, pending a final ruling on Tiwi Islanders’ legal challenge to the Barossa project; Justice Charlesworth on Monday said she was not convinced that the pipeline would cause irreparable harm to the cultural heritag of the traditional owners. Santos CEO Kevin Gallagher says the company will shortly resume its drilling program, adding that the court ruling will have broad economic benefits.

CORPORATES
SANTOS LIMITED – ASX STO, FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

Origin Energy shareholders await sweeteners from Brookfield, EIG consortium

Original article by Colin Packham
The Australian – Page: Online : 12-Oct-23

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission having approved Brookfield and EIG’s $18.7 billion bid for Origin Energy, Brookfield and EIG must now persuade 75 per cent of Origin’s shareholders to endorse the deal. Two of its major shareholders have already stated that the bid is too low, while its current share price suggest investors expect an improved offer. When Brookfield and EIG made its offer earlier in the year, its bid valued Origin at $8.85 a share, but they closed on Wednesday at $9.21.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN COMPETITION AND CONSUMER COMMISSION,[SPACE]BROOKFIELD ASSET MANAGEMENT INCORPORATED,[SPACE]EIG ACQUISITION CORPORATION,[SPACE]ORIGIN ENERGY LIMITED – ASX ORG

MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS – AUSTRALIA]

Origin to tip $600m into battery

Original article by Colin Packham
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 17 : 21-Apr-23

Origin Energy stated in February that it will close the Eraring coal-fired power station in 2025, and that it intends to build a battery on the station. Origin has now made a final investment decision to proceed with the $600 million battery, which will have a capacity of 460MW, with the option to increase it to 700MW. At a capacity of 460MW, the battery will have a dispatch duration of two hours; this would increase to four hours at 700MW.

CORPORATES
ORIGIN ENERGY LIMITED – ASX ORG

Woodside faces climate protest vote

Original article by Giuseppe Tauriello
The Australian – Page: 15 & 18 : 15-Mar-23

Woodside Energy’s climate strategy will come under scrutiny again at its AGM on 28 April. Some 49 per cent of shareholders had voted against the oil and gas group’s climate report at its 2022 AGM. Climate activists contend that Woodside’s latest climate plan fails to address concerns that were raised in 2022. Meanwhile, Vision Super and Betashares have joined with the Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility in calling for shareholders to vote against the re-election of Ian Macfarlane, Swee Chen Goh and Larry Archibald to Woodside’s board. They contend that the three directors should be held to account for the board’s repeated failure to present a credible climate strategy.

CORPORATES
WOODSIDE ENERGY GROUP LIMITED – ASX WDS, VISION SUPER PTY LTD, BETASHARES CAPITAL LIMITED, AUSTRALASIAN CENTRE FOR CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY

No need for a windfall tax: Woodside boss

Original article by Nick Evans
The Australian – Page: 15 : 28-Feb-23

Woodside Energy has posted a net profit of $US6.5bn ($9.7bn) for the 2022 calendar year, and an underlying profit after tax of $US5.2bn. It is Woodside’s first financial result since its merger with BHP’s petroleum division in June, and CEO Meg O’Neill says it has already achieved the forecast $US400m in operating synergies. Woodside paid $989m in corporate taxes in 2022, up from $333m in the previous year; it also had a petroleum resource rent tax bill of $720m, compared with zero in 2021. O’Neill says a super profits tax on resources groups is not necessary, arguing that the existing tax system is working.

CORPORATES
WOODSIDE ENERGY GROUP LIMITED – ASX WDS, BHP GROUP LIMITED – ASX BHP