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The project is intended to supply the Darwin LNG facility (DLNG) at Wickham Point, Middle Arm near Darwin, only the second facility of its kind in Australia. The Barossa Gas Project will replace the supply from the Bayu-Undan field since reserves were depleted in 2023. [ 3 ]
LNG for use as a fuel, as seen on this LNG bunkering vessel is regulated by the Code. The IGF Code provides industry standards for ships that use fuels with a flashpoint of less than 60°C. The IGF Code seeks to regulate the safety changes from the carriage and use of gas fuel, in particular liquefied natural gas and other low-flashpoint fuels.
The Floating, Production, Storage and Offloading Vessel (FPSO), the Ichthys Venturer, is 336 m (1,102 ft) long and can hold 178 × 10 ^ 3 m 3 (1.12 × 10 ^ 6 bbl) of crude oil. Like the CPF it is designed to last 40 years, much longer than a typical FPSO, which is vital due to the need to ensure liquids are removed from the gas trunkline to the ...
A liquefied natural gas terminal is a facility for managing the import and/or export of liquefied natural gas (LNG). It comprises equipment for loading and unloading of LNG cargo to/from ocean-going tankers, for transfer across the site, liquefaction, re-gasification, processing, storage, pumping, compression, and metering of LNG. [1]
[2] The Final Investment Decision for the LNG Canada project has been considered a significant step not only for Canada's energy industry but also for the global LNG industry, as natural gas, including its liquefied form, is being used more and more extensively to fuel power plants, petrochemical plants and natural gas distribution pipelines to ...
The facility has a single liquefaction train that can produce 72 million cubic feet a day of LNG. [22] On 4 June 2018, Golar LNG announced that their FLNG Hilli Episeyo had got a customer acceptance after successfully being tested in 16 days commissioning. FLNG Hilli Episeyo will serve Parenco Cameroon SA in Cameroon's water.
Carbon dioxide (CO 2), which comprises around 15% of the raw gas stream from the Gorgon field, is stripped out then injected into formations 2 kilometers [23] below the island, with 3.4 to 4 million tonnes of CO 2 planned to be stored each year. [24] Inclusion of the carbon capture project was required by Australian environmental regulators. [23]
The proposed expansion was projected to cost $3.4 billion to $3.8 billion. [10] The export project was completed in early 2018, making the facility bidirectional (being capable of importation and exportation of LNG). The export facility has the capacity to handle 1.8 billion cubic feet (51 million cubic metres) per day of natural gas. [11]