Tangguh gas field

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 150.203.87.63 (talk) at 09:01, 6 September 2013 (→‎See also). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Tangguh gas field
CountryIndonesia
RegionWest Papua
LocationBintuni Bay
Offshore/onshoreOffshore
OperatorBP
PartnersBP (37%)
CNOOC (17%)
Mitsubishi Corporation
(16.3%)
Nippon Energy
Kanematsu
Sumitomo
Nissho Iwai
Field history
Discovery1990s[1]
Start of production2009
Production
Producing formationsJurassic[2]

The Tangguh gas field lies in Bintuni Bay, in the province of West Papua, Indonesia. The natural gas field contains over 500 billion m³ (17 Tcf) of proven natural gas reserves, with estimates of potential reserves reaching over 800 billion cubic metres (28 trillion cubic feet).

The Tangguh field is developed by a consortium of international companies, led by BP (37% stake), CNOOC (17%), and Mitsubishi Corporation (16.3%). Smaller partners include the Japanese companies Nippon Energy, Kanematsu, Sumitomo, and Nissho Iwai.

Production began in June 2009.[3]

Natural gas extracted from the field will be liquefied and the resulting LNG transported to Asian customers, mostly in China, South Korea, Japan. The project is expected to allow Indonesia to keep a significant share of world LNG market, compensating the progressive phase-out of the Arun terminal in Sumatra, whose reserves are largely depleted.

References

See also

Energy in Indonesia

External links