Beach pens Waitsia deal with Webuild

Australia’s Beach Energy has signed a deal with Italy’s Webuild to complete the second stage of the Waitsia gas project in Western Australia.

A unit of Japan’s Mitsui & Co, the operator of the the Waitsia Stage 2 project, and Beach took a final investment decision on the expansion project in December 2020.

Prior to that, the partners signed third-party tolling deals with Australia’s Woodside and its North West Shelf LNG venture participants.

Last year, Beach also finalized a deal to supply LNG to a unit of energy giant BP.

Mitsui E&P Australia and Beach previously awarded the engineering, procurement and construction gig to Australian contractor Clough.

However, Clough was placed into voluntary administration in December last year after a deal by its parent Murray & Roberts and Webuild fell through.

Webuild said last week it signed a contract with the Deloitte Administrators of Clough to acquire Clough assets and now the firm reached the deal with Beach to complete delivery of the Waitsia Stage 2 project.

Beach said in a statement issued on Monday that the deal remains subject to finalization of the Clough administration.

Following Webuild’s due diligence and review of cost and work schedules, Beach has revised its total capital expenditure estimate to A$400 – A450 million net to Beach (A$350 – A400 million originally) with the Waitsia JV and Webuild targeting first gas from the Waitsia gas plant by the end of 2023, it said.

Beach said the JV partners have worked with Clough administrators to “ensure employee wages, subcontractors and suppliers continue to get paid, allowing the Waitsia gas plant construction to continue during this difficult time.”

The firm added that Webuild’s acquisition of Clough and its personnel, systems and processes would enable project execution to continue uninterrupted.

Most Popular

Duo competing to win New Zealand LNG terminal deal

New Zealand has shortlisted two providers to deliver its first liquefied natural gas (LNG) import terminal.

Hudong-Zhonghua kicks off construction on first QC-Max LNG carrier

Chinese shipbuilder Hudong-Zhonghua has officially started building the first ultra-large QC-Max LNG carrier as part of the massive QatarEnergy shipbuilding program. The shipbuilder says this is the world's largest LNG carrier.

South Korea’s Samsung Heavy clinches another LNG carrier order

South Korean shipbuilding giant Samsung Heavy Industries has secured an order to build another liquefied natural gas (LNG) carrier for approximately $252 million.

More News Like This

Gas Malaysia gets OK for FSRU terminal

Gas Malaysia said it had received a letter to proceed from the Energy Commission of Malaysia for its planned FSRU-based LNG regasification terminal in Yan, Kedah.

Santos, Beach greenlight MCO project

Australian LNG player Santos and its joint venture partner Beach Energy have taken a final investment decision to proceed with the Moomba Central Optimisation (MCO) project in the Cooper Basin, South Australia.

Malaysia’s MHB hits LNG carrier repair record

Malaysia Marine and Heavy Engineering (MHB) has delivered 26 LNG carrier repairs in 2025, the highest in its history.

Venture Global, Mitsui ink 20-year LNG SPA

US LNG exporter Venture Global LNG has signed a long-term sales and purchase deal with Japanese trading house Mitsui & Co.