Tue. Nov 5th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

An Italian energy company has quietly revived plans to develop a new gas field in the Timor Sea which contains some of the most carbon-intensive gas in Australia.

The Evans Shoal gas field, about 300 kilometres north-west of Darwin, was discovered 35 years ago and has since passed through the hands of BHP Petroleum, Woodside, Shell, and Santos.

Since 2017 it has been controlled by Eni, an Italian energy company that operates in more than 60 countries, which has recently renamed the project Verus.

The gas in the Verus field has a very high percentage of carbon dioxide — an average of 27 per cent, according to Geoscience Australia.

“That is far more than any other gas field that is being developed in Australia,” said Kevin Morrison from the Institute of Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA).

Eni has an 11 per cent stake in the Santos-controlled Darwin LNG plant. ()

For comparison, the gas field neighbouring Verus, the Santos-owned Barossa, has a high CO2 content at 18 per cent which is significantly higher than Woodside’s Scarborough gas field in Western Australia with just 0.1 per cent CO2.

Mr Morrison said the high carbon dioxide content of Verus’ gas has deterred previous companies from developing the project.

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