BP expects to launch third Tangguh LNG train next year

UK-based energy giant BP is expecting to launch the delayed Train 3 project at the Tangguh LNG facility in Indonesia next year, according to the company’s chief executive Bernard Looney.

Operator BP and its partners are expanding the 7.6 mtpa facility with the addition of the third liquefaction train.

The expansion will add 3.8 mtpa capacity to the facility located in Papua Barat province. Besides the expansion, BP is also working on a carbon capture utilization and storage project at the facility.

BP Berau and its affiliates in Indonesia hold a 40.22 percent interest in the Tangguh project.

Other Tangguh production sharing contract partners are MI Berau, CNOOC Muturi, Nippon Oil Exploration, KG Berau Petroleum, Indonesia Natural Gas Resources Muturi, and KG Wiriagar Petroleum.

BP and the Chiyoda-Saipem-Tripatra-Suluh Ardhi Engineering (CSTS) consortium, the project’s EPC contractor, originally expected to launch the expansion project in the third quarter of 2020.

However, BP delayed the launch of the project several times due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

“Tangguh has been very, very challenging from a Covid perspective, as you might imagine,
over the last couple of years,” Looney told analysts during the company’s second-quarter results call earlier this month.

“You can imagine a site with 10,000 workers at the time, with medical facilities for an accident or somebody getting hurt, but not medical facilities for a pandemic, and having to de-man that site and then ramp it back up,” he said.

“And we are actually back at 12,000 people on-site today in Tangguh. It is going well,” Looney said.

“The team is doing a fantastic job and we would hope to start that up by the end of next year,” he added.

Most Popular

Venture Global’s Plaquemines LNG seals new gas supply deal

Venture Global LNG’s Plaquemines LNG has signed a new natural gas sale and purchase deal with gas marketer Tenaska Marketing Ventures, according to a DOE filing.

TotalEnergies working on Mozambique LNG restart, CEO says

France's TotalEnergies and its partners in the giant Mozambique LNG project are still working with the Mozambique government on restarting construction on the 12.8 mtpa project, according to Patrick Pouyanne, CEO of TotalEnergies.

Shell takes FID on Egypt gas project

A unit of UK-based LNG giant Shell has taken the final investment decision for the development of the Mina West gas discovery in Egypt’s Mediterranean Sea.

More News Like This

BP names new chair

UK-based energy giant and LNG player BP has appointed Albert Manifold to succeed Helge Lund as chair of the company.

Argentina’s Enarsa receives five offers for latest LNG cargo tender

Argentina's state-owned LNG importer Energia Argentina (Enarsa) has received five offers for its fourth LNG cargo tender in 2025.

Former Shell CFO joins BP’s board

UK-based energy giant BP has appointed Simon Henry, Shell's former finance chief, to its board as a non-executive director.

Argentina’s Enarsa to spend $567 million on LNG purchases

Argentina's state-owned LNG importer, Energia Argentina (Enarsa), will spend $570 million to purchase 22 liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargoes from BP and TotalEnergies this year.