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Session 14. Oral Presentation for: Australia’s gas markets: similar problems…similar solutions?

John Gibb A *
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- Author Affiliations

A Wood Mackenzie, Perth, WA, Australia.




John Gibb is a research director in our upstream Australasia Oil & Gas team. He provides analysis of economics, strategies and industry trends across the region. John joined Wood Mackenzie in late 2022. He is a successful Oil & Gas professional with extensive business experience in Australia and internationally. John’s career includes 27 years working with Shell in various upstream and downstream roles. He started with Shell in the UK and then spent 21 years working in The Middle East, South America, Russia and Australia in various operating and project roles. John graduated from the University of Edinburgh with a BSc degree and is a member of CIMA (ACMA).

* Correspondence to: john.gibb@woodmac.com

Australian Energy Producers Journal 64 https://doi.org/10.1071/EP23344
Published: 7 June 2024

© 2024 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of Australian Energy Producers.

Abstract

Presented on Wednesday 22 May: Session 14

Declining supply and entrenched demand in all three of Australia’s domestic gas markets – the East Coast, Western Australia (WA) and the Northern Territory (NT) – is creating similar issues. We tend to think of these as essentially separate, disconnected and divided by vast swathes of land. But the reality is that scarce local supply has been sanctioned in all three markets – despite around 16 tcf being sanctioned for export as liquefied natural gas (LNG) – and domestic demand remains resilient, as per both Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) and Wood Mackenzie forecasts. Starting with the largest, the increasingly tight East Coast market continues to hit headlines as it deals with supply crises, government interventions and new regulations. Undersupplied, underinvested and underexplored, it is also divided by activism and state and federal politics. Traditionally more sedate, the WA market has slowly drifted in a similar direction. New forecasts highlighting potential gas shortages have sparked more state intervention in the market, including banning LNG exports by certain suppliers. The NT market might be the smallest, but it’s ahead of the curve, already experiencing emergency upstream shortages that sparked increased domestic supply from LNG exporters. While there is a less diverse range of supply sources in the NT, the answer to current shortages matches the options currently being looked at by regulators on both coasts.

To access the Oral Presentation click the link on the right. To read the full paper click here

Keywords: Australia, Bass, Beetaloo, Browse, carbon capture and storage, Carnarvon, CCS/CCUS, Cooper, corporate strategy, decarbonisation, deepwater, gas, Gippsland, offshore, onshore, Otway, Perth Basin, social licence, Surat, upstream.

Biographies

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John Gibb is a research director in our upstream Australasia Oil & Gas team. He provides analysis of economics, strategies and industry trends across the region. John joined Wood Mackenzie in late 2022. He is a successful Oil & Gas professional with extensive business experience in Australia and internationally. John’s career includes 27 years working with Shell in various upstream and downstream roles. He started with Shell in the UK and then spent 21 years working in The Middle East, South America, Russia and Australia in various operating and project roles. John graduated from the University of Edinburgh with a BSc degree and is a member of CIMA (ACMA).