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Gold/Mining/Energy : LNG -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)1/30/2004 12:03:26 PM
From: Dennis Roth  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 919
 
INTERVIEW: Australia, Asia May Have Edge In LNG Market
sg.biz.yahoo.com

Friday January 30, 2:57 PM
By Edgar Ang
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

SINGAPORE (Dow Jones)--Australian and Asian liquefied natural gas producers may have a competitive edge over aggressive Middle East producers in capturing contracts in the enormous, and growing Chinese and US markets, according to a major regional producer.

Australasian suppliers face a tough battle among themselves to cash in on these markets, and also with producers such as Qatar LNG, which boasts huge gas reserve of 15 trillion cubic feet and has relatively low production costs.

But Australian and Asian producers may win coveted US and Chinese contracts due to transport cost advantages, and possibly for political reasons.

The major Australian LNG producer is North West Shelf Venture, while Asian producers are Indonesia's Pertamina, Malaysia's Petronas and Brunei LNG.

Despite their higher production costs, Australian and Asian producers hold the shipping advantage for the Asia-Pacific and US West coast markets, said John Banner, president of North West Shelf Australia LNG Pty Ltd, in a recent interview with Dow Jones Newswires.

NWSA LNG is the LNG marketing arm of North West Shelf Venture, an equal-share joint-venture group BHP Billiton Petroleum, BP Developments Australia, ChevronTexaco Australia, Japan Australia LNG, Shell Development Australia, Woodside Energy.

NWSA LNG now sells about 7.5 million tons per year of LNG to South Korea and Japan, and soon will be supplying China.

In 2003 it won a supply contract in southern China and is expected to supply at least 3.3 million metric tons of LNG to Guangdong province from 2006. About 60% of the import volume is for power generation.

But competition is fierce and a string of major supply contracts in China and the US are pending.

Last year, Qatar Liquefied Gas Company Ltd. (Qatargas) snagged the 25-year term supply contract with Taiwan's Chinese Petroleum Corp. for its new 4,272 Megawatt Tatan combined-cycle power plant.

NWSV is, nonetheless powering ahead with its expansion plans. Its new "No.4" 4.2 million tons/year capacity LNG production train is on schedule for mid-2004 completion, Banner said. The new train is expected to produce its first LNG cargo in the later part of this year.

NWSA may consider a fifth LNG production train if it secures more supply contracts, he said.

Geographical Advantage

Middle East suppliers have the shipping advantage for markets in Europe, the US Atlantic coast and the South Asia regions, he said.

But key supplier Qatar may not be in a position to penetrate the Chinese market due to political factors, some industry sources argue.

That's because its LNG sales to Taiwan may put it out of the running for supply contracts to mainland China.

Talking up NSVW's advantages, Banner pointed out that many LNG buyers prefer to buy their supplies from established plants rather than greenfield projects.

"Middle East (Iranian South Pars) and Asian Pacific projects (Indonesian Tangguh projects) are greenfield projects with no track record," he said, adding that NSWV recently delivered its 1,500th consecutive cargo to its term customer in Japan.

Greenfield projects are new projects which haven't come onstream.

Strong Demand Growth

China's first LNG terminal, in Guangdong, will be supplied by NWSV, while a second terminal in Fujian is expected to be supplied by the Tangguh project.

Another four supply contracts for terminals in Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Shandong are expected to be put up for grabs in the near term, pending government approval.

China seems to favor Australian LNG. Last October, China National Offshore and Oil Corp. announced plans to buy a 12.5% state in the western Australia Gorgon gas project and take some 100 million tons of Gorgon LNG over the next 25 years. The first gas from the Gorgon project is expected in 2008.

CNOOC had previously announced its intention to take a 25% stake in the North-West Shelf China project.

The US West coast and Mexico have proposals for about 10 LNG receiving terminals, and it is expected at least two to three projects will get off the ground, Banner said.

Indonesia is expected to supply 3 million tons/year of Tangguh LNG to US West Coast, but the US West coast has room for more LNG suppliers.

Gas output in China and the US are declining gradually and domestic demand is growing, raising the need for more gas imports in the future, Banner said.

This may change the current perception of a "buyer's market" among term LNG buyers.

Right now, "there's a limited number of LNG buyers, and the buyers are getting more sellers knocking at their doors," Banner said.

However, with China and US West coast expecting to commission import terminals in 2006-2007, demand in these markets should grow quickly, he said.

Indonesia is trying to secure gas buyers for the Tangguh project, and Malaysia is actively seeking buyers for much of the production from its new 3.4 million ton/year production train 8 at MLNG Tiga.

Banner cautioned that LNG spot demand can increase suddenly during emergencies, such as Japan's nuclear power shortage problem last year, or cold spells in North Asia.

"There were fewer spot cargoes in the Asian market last year because many surplus cargoes went to Japan and South Korea...Some spot cargoes were even sourced from West Africa," Banner said.

Partly due to the continuous high North Asian demand, NWSV production is expected to be fully committed for this year.

"We're sold out for this year, but we could still possibly squeeze out one extra spot cargo," Banner said.

Taiwan's CPC, which currently buys term LNG from Malaysia and Indonesia, couldn't secure any Asian spot cargoes last year when it was forced into the market by a shortage of coal supplies.

Copyright © 2002 Dow Jones & Company Inc. All rights reserved.



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)2/21/2004 8:55:23 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
Gaz Métro seeks site for terminal
canada.com

Ambitious plan moving forward: chief. Port near Rivière du Loup among possible locations for liquefied natural-gas project

NICOLAS VAN PRAET
The Gazette

Friday, February 20, 2004
ADVERTISEMENT

Gaz Métro, the province's biggest natural-gas distributor, said it is closer to finalizing plans for a liquefied natural-gas terminal and processing plant in Quebec.

The company said it knows where it will get the gas, but must decide on a site to unload it. A decision is expected within a few months, said Gaz Métro chief executive Robert Tessier.

Liquefied natural-gas tankers would move supercold gas from a producer region like North Africa to a terminal along the St. Lawrence River. The LNG would then be stored and revaporized before being pumped into a pipeline for distribution.

Gaz Métro is making the move to diversify the sources of its natural gas. Right now, all of its gas is pumped in from Alberta. About 30 liquefied natural-gas projects are in the works across North America, Tessier said. The technology has been in place for years in other countries like France.

"The gas industry is going to become a global industry just like oil," Tessier predicted after the company's annual meeting in Montreal yesterday.

One site being considered is Gros Cacouna, a small port near Rivière du Loup. For more than 30 years, local residents have dreamed that Cacouna would one day become a major deep-sea port on the St. Lawrence. It never happened. Today, it accommodates mostly forest products, lumber and general cargo.

Tessier said an LNG terminal could be operational by 2008.

He made the comments as Gaz Métro reported a tiny increase in profits for its first quarter, which ended Dec. 31.

Earnings came in at $71.8 million, or 63 cents a unit, compared with a profit of $70.8 million, or 64 cents a unit, for the period in 2002. Revenues rose to $525 million from $502 million, an increase of 4.6 per cent.

Tessier said it was still too early to measure the concrete impact of Gaz Métro's major brand revamp and publicity campaign, launched last fall. The company changed its name from Gaz Métropolitain and created a new slogan: "Life is Blue."

Last year, Gaz Métro signed up 4,250 new residential clients. It is counting on a strong residential housing market to boost that total this year.

Gaz Métro delivers about 97 per cent of all natural gas consumed in Quebec. The company also distributes gas in Vermont, has stakes in two pipeline companies, and sells goods and services in wastewater and fibreoptics networks. It employs 1,500 workers and has about 150,000 Quebec customers.

nvanpraet@thegazette.canwest.com
© Copyright 2004 Montreal Gazette



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)6/30/2004 7:51:26 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 919
 
Statia Terminals explores LNG terminal at the Strait of Canso.
Wednesday, June 30, 2004 The Halifax Herald Limited
herald.ns.ca
...
File
Statia Terminals is exploring the idea of building a liquefied natural gas plant at the Strait of Canso.

Gas plant
proposed
Statia's LNG facility would be second built at Strait

By TOM PETERS / Business Reporter

Statia Terminals says it is serious about spending hundreds of millions of dollars on a liquefied natural gas project at the Strait of Canso.

If the project goes ahead it would be the second LNG facility earmarked for the Strait.

Calgary-based Access Northeast Energy Inc. is well along in its plans to build a $450-million plant and terminal at Bear Head.

Paul Crissman, president of Statia Terminals Canada Partnership, said Tuesday that Statia has been considering an LNG facility for several years.

"Statia Terminals is already in the petroleum storage business, so going into LNG importation is a natural fit for us," he said.

The Access Northeast project will include liquefied natural gas plant with terminal, unloading facilities, storage tank area and re-gasification area at Bear Head.

The Bear Head site is only a short distance from Statia Terminals.

Access Northeast has already filed is environmental assessment documents and has been receiving comments.

Gordon Hart, president of Access Northeast, said in a telephone interview from Calgary on Tuesday that he welcomes competition.

"I don't know how real the project is because at this stage I have not seen a project description or anything of that nature," he said.

"I do know in our case we spent two years developing this project and it will take at least two years or more to develop any other projects. . . . They will likely have to go through the same process as we did," he said.

The first step for Access Northeast was to prove its business case to the provincial government.

Mr. Hart warned that the market in the northeastern U.S., where the gas would be piped, could not sustain more than one or two LNG sites.

Irving Oil of Saint John, N.B., also has plans to build a liquefied natural gas plant at its Canaport facility, the company's oil-handling operation.

The proposal has cleared some regulatory hurdles, and a public hearing into the project was scheduled for Tuesday in Fredericton.

"We are a market-driven facility and we do not want to hurt the market and pricing in Boston and New England," Mr. Hart said.

"If we were to overbuild we could damage the price in the marketplace and therefore hurt the offshore. . . . Producers could say they were not going to drill if they don't see a return that reflects market price."

He said industry has to be aware of these issues when designing and developing these facilities.

Mr. Crissman said there are several LNG facilities in the U.S. and many planned.

"I can't comment on their potential for success. . . . I think that is a concern right now, to see which projects are the most robust, which ones will make it past the drawing board and into the realm of viability," he said.

"Not all of them will."

The Statia president said the final design for an LNG facility should be finalized before the company begins a public consultation process.

"It is forthcoming, and it won't be in the long term," he said.

Mr. Crissman said Statia has already had discussions with potential users "and trying to match it up with market demand."

Statia has also been considering the potential for compressed natural gas.

Statia would bring the LNG into the Strait via larger tanker vessels and then move it to markets through a pipeline. Mr. Crissman said there has been some discussion about using the Maritimes and Northeast Pipeline system.

Port Hawkesbury Mayor Billy Joe MacLean says he welcomes the news of any new project for the Strait but is skeptical about Statia's motivation.

Mr. MacLean said Statia, at one point, scoffed at the idea of an LNG facility, saying it would not be a successful venture.

"I do hope that the powers that be do not slow down the process of the one industry we have in hand and wind up losing both of them," he said.

"So I hope the government officials and boards will deal with the first project and finalize it before moving on to look at another."

Mr. MacLean said Access Northeast met with local officials long before it made its plans public, but that hasn't happened with Statia.

"Here, all of a sudden, Statia arrives on the scene, a company that is on our doorstep that has never had a discussion with local leaders," he said.

"I am the chairman of the mayors and wardens committee for the Strait, and we are fully committed with support on record for the project of Access Energy.



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)8/9/2004 8:04:15 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
Future of natural gas terminal debated for N.S.
canada.com

Broadcast News

August 9, 2004

Federal and Nova Scotia environment officials are expected to decide later Monday whether to allow a proposed liquified natural gas terminal on the Strait of Canso.

The terminal would be built on land at Bear Head near Port Hawkesbury.

If the $450-million project gets approved it will be the second one in Atlantic Canada.

On Friday New Brunswick approved plans by Irving Oil to build an LNG terminal in Saint John.

There's been no opposition from local municipalities to a project that could create up to a thousand construction jobs over the next three years.

But government regulators have received about a half dozen letters from environmentalists, the Mik'maq and businesses worried that tankers might slow down shipping in the Strait of Canso.



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)8/9/2004 4:56:37 PM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
Atlantic Canada's second LNG terminal gets environmental approval
Updated at 16:48 on August 9, 2004, EST.
www3.cjad.com

HALIFAX (CP) - Nova Scotia moved one step closer Monday to having its own liquefied natural gas terminal.

The province's Environment Department and the federal Fisheries Department gave the green light to a proposal by Access Northeast Energy Inc. The company wants to construct and operate a $415-million LNG plant at Bear Head, N.S., on the Strait of Canso, which would unload condensed natural gas arriving in supertankers, turn it back into a vapour and channel it into a pipeline for shipment south.

"This is really excellent news and a significant milestone," said Kim West, a spokeswoman for Access.

The proposal examined by the environmental assessment includes a marine terminal, land-based storage tanks and a facility in which the liquefied gas will be converted.

Environment Minister Kerry Morash said the company must still submit plans to deal with storms, potential spills and wetlands protection.

"There were no surprises in today's decision," said West. "We had expected conditions to be attached. We will meet all of these requirements."

The project still has a series of hurdles to cross.

Each of the company's proposals to meet the environmental conditions that were spelled out Monday will have to be reviewed and approved.

But by far, the biggest obstacle to overcome will be attracting suppliers to the terminal.

However, West said with the environmental approvals out of the way, commercial negotiations can be finalized.

Last week, environment officials in New Brunswick approved a plan to construct an LNG plant near Saint John, N.B.

To meet growing demands in the United States, energy companies are planning to ship supertankers full of liquefied natural gas to North American ports from foreign suppliers such as Russia and Saudi Arabia.

Commercial operations for the proposed Bear Head terminal are expected to begin in November 2007.

Economic Development Minister Ernie Fage said the project could serve as an important catalyst for the development of a petrochemical industry.

But more important, he said it will provide gas to keep the Maritimes and Northeast Pipeline to New England operating at full capacity.

"It will be good for jobs and growth locally," he said.

"It'll help maintain that pipeline for us in the future as more offshore reserves are brought on and discovered in Nova Scotia."

The province's offshore natural gas industry has been operating under a cloud of uncertainty.

The estimated reserves of the Sable Island project have been downgraded and Nova Scotia's second planned development - Deep Panuke - is on hold while Encana Corp. finds a way to make it economically feasible.

The Canadian Press, 2004



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)8/10/2004 6:25:34 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 919
 
LNG plant clears hurdle
Environmental OK may set stage for N.S.-N.B. pipeline access fight

By JUDY MYRDEN / Business Reporter
Tuesday, August 10, 2004 The Halifax Herald Limited
herald.ns.ca

A proposed $450-million plant for Cape Breton to process super-chilled liquefied natural gas got environmental approval Monday from the federal and provincial governments.

It was the first regulatory hurdle cleared by Access Northeast Energy Inc. of Calgary in its bid to build and operate a liquefied natural gas terminal at Bear Head, on the Strait of Canso.

"It's a first, very significant milestone, and that sets the course for a whole series of other permits," said Kim West, a Halifax spokeswoman for Access Northeast.

The company will also need provincial approval to build the plant and will have to submit evidence that the project will benefit the province.

She said the project is on schedule to start operation in 2007 and is being backed by ARC Financial Corp. of Calgary, Canada's largest private energy investment equity firm.

The news comes three days after Irving Oil of Saint John got the green light from the New Brunswick and federal governments to build a $750-million LNG plant to start operating by 2007.

One energy analyst said that's not a coincidence, since the two provinces could be vying for pipeline access to ship the incoming gas to the U.S. northeast.

Damien Dufour, president of Dufour Energy Commodities of Calgary, said Maritimes and Northeast Pipeline, operators of the only gas access route from the U.S. to Atlantic Canada, could be caught in a "battle" between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.

There are four LNG terminals in the United States and none in Canada, but that could change, given the approvals in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.

Mr. Dufour said many LNG sites in the United States can't get environmental approval, so for two to get the go-ahead in Atlantic Canada is significant.

But he warned: "Remember, there is limited capability to move the gas south because there is a limit on the size of the pipeline."

Mr. Dufour said there may not be room along the pipeline for the two projects, which are scheduled to come on stream at the same time.

"So the pipeline will have to be expanded - so that is a another whole can of worms. That's the biggest issue right now.

"It's a question of how do you move it. It will be a battle between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick (as to) who gets pipeline capacity."

No contracts have been signed with a pipeline owner, but staff from Maritimes and Northeast, which transports Sable gas to New England, have talked to Access Northeast officials. Maritimes and Northeast is seen as a strong candidate to carry the LNG.

Nova Scotia Environment Minister Kerry Morash said the approval for Access Northeast has been granted under strict conditions.

Terms of the huge project include storm water management, air quality controls and development of an emergency spill contingency plan.

Access Northeast must also submit a monitoring plan for the protection of a rare species of orchid called the southern twayblade.

Ms. West said the project will meet all government requirements.

"There was nothing that we heard today that we hadn't anticipated . . . really no surprises," she said.

Access Northeast announced last August its plans to build and operate an LNG terminal, along with unloading facilities, storage tank area and regasification section.

A company spokesman has said the project would employ about 1,100 people at the peak of construction and 30 to 40 when in operation.

The liquid natural gas would be brought to the terminal by huge ships from Qatar and Algeria, then transported to market by pipeline.

Access Northeast filed its environmental assessment May 9, asking for approval from the provincial and federal governments. The public had 30 days to submit comments.

Since then, two other LNG plant proponents, Statia Terminals of Point Tupper and Keltic Petrochemicals of Halifax, have announced plans for projects in the Strait of Canso and Goldboro, Guysborough County. Neither has filed an environmental assessment.

The Irving facility, outside Saint John, will be located at Irving's Canaport, next to the firm's major oil refinery and close to a major market, the U.S. eastern seaboard. Canaport is 95 kilometres from the American border.

Irving Oil has said it will build three 160,000-cubic-metre LNG tanks, which are capable of carrying up to one billion cubic feet of natural gas per day.

The Strait terminal would produce 750 million to one billion cubic feet of gas per day - equivalent to an average day's supply of natural gas for up to four million homes.

LNG represents about six per cent of worldwide natural gas consumption and about 94 per cent in Japan, where it has been used for years.



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)2/13/2005 3:03:36 PM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
New homepage for Bear Head LNG Terminal project.
anadarko.com
The Jan. 18, 2005 - Supplier / Contractor Information Presentation is quite informative,



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)5/4/2005 11:23:08 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
LNG Anadarko purchases site for new terminal


Cape Breton Post
Tuesday, May 3, 2005

BEAR HEAD – Another step toward this summer’s start of construction of the Anadarko Petroleum LNG terminal at Bear Head is the deed to the land by the province.

Nova Scotia Business Inc., Monday, announced the sale of an industrial site, near Point Tupper, for the $600-million terminal and regasification plant.

Houston-based Anadarko Petroleum, an independent exploration and production company, paid $4.62 million for the 179 acres of land and a 67-acre water lot.

NSBI president and CEO Stephen Lund said contraction will begin this summer, noting: “we look forward to the first flow of gas into the pipeline from the Bear Head LNG plant in mid-2008.”

The province’s business development agency, led by the private-sector board of directors, is acting as the project manager and actively pursuing new, promising gas-related commercial opportunities in the area.

Regasification is the process by which liquefied natural gas, delivered by tankers, is converted back to a gaseous state and then fed into the MNE pipeline.

Lund said the development will ensure a long-term gas supply to the United States and prompt the expansion of the Maritimes and Northeast Pipeline that now supplies Sable gas to the northeast United States.

“Community leadership, a world-class site, and strong commercial partners with a solid business plan combined to make this project a reality,” Lund added.

The LNG project, announced last August, has already undergone road construction and site work.

The three-year construction phase of the project will create an average of 600 jobs, with 35-40 permanent positions when the operation begins.

Anadarko has adjusted its construction schedule to coincide with the completion of the expansion of the Maritimes and Northeast Pipeline.



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)5/19/2005 1:51:40 PM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
LNG company establishes growth fund worth $7.5M US
Nancy King
Thursday, May 19, 2005
/http://www.capebretonpost.com/news.aspx?storyID=34843

Bear Head - The company behind a proposed liquefied natural gas plant in Richmond County is setting up a Strait Area Growth Fund to provide money to businesses that will complement its development.

Nova Scotia Business Inc. and Bear Head LNG Corp., an affiliate of Anadarko Canada Corp., officially announced the creation of the fund, valued at $7.5 million US over 10 years, Wednesday.

It came a day after details were unveiled for business people at a reception at the Port Hawkesbury Civic Centre.

The fund will serve as a new source of funding to promote businesses and industries complementary to the regasification terminal under construction.

The fund will begin dispensing money when the terminal is operational, which is anticipated to be 2008.

Randy Kopjar, vice-president of gas commercialization for Anadarko Canada Corp., noted new businesses and industries that can support and create new markets for energy can contribute to the long-term economic health of the Strait area.

“We’re certainly pleased, anytime you get capital investment of that kind of magnitude for our community,” said Dan Fougere, president of the Strait Area Chamber of Commerce. “I think it will help some ancillary businesses get up and running in the Bear Head area, as the Anadarko project comes on stream.”

There is a lot of excitement among the area’s business community about the possible spinoffs that will be produced by the proposed LNG construction project, Fougere said.

“The capital value of the project is likely to exceed $500 million, which will certainly rank with the largest investments that have ever been made in our area — Stora Enso and any of the other players in the area,” he said. “It’s going to have a multiplier effect, there’s no doubt about it.”

It’s not the first time the company has indicated it intends to invest in the region.

When the Port Hawkesbury Civic Centre opened last fall, Anadarko announced it will contribute $2.5 million over 10 years to the centre’s operational costs.



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)6/30/2005 9:40:43 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 919
 
Anadarko Advances LNG Project with Transportation Agreement
June 30, 2005 08:38 AM US Eastern Timezone
home.businesswire.com

HOUSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 30, 2005--Anadarko Petroleum Corporation (NYSE: APC) today announced it has signed agreements for nominated capacity on a planned expansion of the Maritimes & Northeast Pipeline (M&NP) system to deliver volumes into Canadian and U.S. markets from Anadarko's Bear Head liquefied natural gas (LNG) import terminal, which will be constructed in Nova Scotia.

"This is a critical step in Anadarko's development of an integrated LNG project," said Karl Kurz, Anadarko Senior Vice President, Marketing and General Manager, U.S. Onshore. "With transportation arrangements now secured into premier North American natural gas markets, Anadarko has added value and visibility to the project while we continue to move forward with LNG supply negotiations."

M&NP's proposed expansion would allow their system to accommodate Anadarko's initial Bear Head sendout capacity of 750 million cubic feet per day to markets in eastern Canada and the U.S. Northeast. The Bear Head terminal site on Point Tupper is approximately 35 miles from the existing pipeline.

Anadarko acquired the Bear Head terminal project in August 2004. Construction planning, site clearing and leveling, and construction of access roads for the Bear Head terminal began in late 2004 to prepare the site for major construction in 2005. In April, Anadarko entered into an agreement with Horton CBI Limited for engineering services and procurement of certain materials necessary for the construction of two 180,000-cubic-meter LNG storage tanks. Bidders also have been short-listed to participate in the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract for the terminal, which is expected to be awarded in late 2005.

First deliveries through the Bear Head terminal are targeted for late 2008.

Anadarko Petroleum Corporation's mission is to deliver a competitive and sustainable rate of return to shareholders by developing, acquiring and exploring for oil and gas resources vital to the world's health and welfare. As of year-end 2004, the company had 2.37 billion BOE of proved reserves, making it one of the world's largest independent exploration and production companies. Anadarko's operational focus extends from the deepwater Gulf of Mexico, up through Texas, Louisiana, the Mid-Continent, western U.S. and Canadian Rockies and onto the North Slope of Alaska. Anadarko also has significant production in Algeria, Venezuela and Qatar, and exploration or production positions in several other countries. For more information about how Anadarko is bringing excellence to the surface, please visit: www.anadarko.com.

This news release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Anadarko believes that its expectations are based on reasonable assumptions. No assurance, however, can be given that such expectations will prove to have been correct. A number of factors could cause actual results to differ materially from the projections, anticipated results or other expectations expressed in this news release. Such factors include the ability to obtain access to upstream supplies of LNG on commercially reasonable terms; competition for transportation capacity and market demand; realized gas price assumptions to include regional basis differentials and transportation charges; pipeline cost overruns; capacity turnbacks impacting rates; changes in gas quality specifications; gas supplies satisfying market demand prior to such time as the Bear Head terminal is operational; the ability to respond to challenges in international markets (including changes in currency exchange rates); the potential exercise by M&NP of options to terminate the transaction; the timely receipt of future U.S. and Canadian regulatory authorizations by M&NP; and other factors and risks identified in the "Regulatory Matters and Additional Factors Affecting Business" section of the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K and other public filings, press releases and discussions with Company management. Anadarko undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward looking statements.



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)8/23/2005 12:07:32 PM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
CB&I gets $100 million contract for work on Anadarko LNG plant
houston.bizjournals.com

CB&I has been awarded a $100 million contract for the design and construction of storage tanks for what will be Canada's first liquefied natural gas import terminal.

The facility, located near Port Hawkesbury on Cape Breton in Nova Scotia, will be owned and operated by Bear Head LNG Corp., a subsidiary of The Woodlands-based Anadarko Petroleum Corp. (NYSE:APC).

The Bear Head LNG project will produce natural gas for markets in eastern Canada and the U.S. Northeast.

The project involves the construction and operation of an approximately 7.5 million tons per annum capacity LNG terminal with a sendout capacity of 1 billion standard cubic feet per day. First gas deliveries through the Bear Head terminal are targeted for late 2008.

CB&I's scope for the project includes the engineering, procurement and construction of two 180,000-cubic-meter LNG storage tanks, including foundations, insulation, paint and piping to grade. Engineering and procurement activity for the project is already under way.

"The Bear Head project will be Canada's first LNG import terminal and will provide an important new source of clean energy," said Gerald M. Glenn, CB&I's chairman, president and CEO.

CB&I (NYSE:CBI), which maintains its North American headquarters in Houston, is an engineering, procurement and construction company specializing in projects for customers that produce, process, store and distribute natural resources.



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)10/5/2005 1:11:50 PM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
LNG plant set for construction
Anadarko building facility in Nova Scotia

By PETER MOREIRA

Wednesday, October 5, 2005 Page B6
theglobeandmail.com

Special to The Globe and Mail

HALIFAX -- Anadarko Canada Corp. says it will begin construction within weeks of the Bear Head liquefied natural gas facility on Cape Breton Island, meaning the Maritimes will have two such facilities a year after some observers wondered whether there would be even one.

The Canadian subsidiary of Houston-based Anadarko Petroleum Corp. has been in a race to build an LNG plant with Saint John-based Irving Oil Ltd. and its partner Repsol YPF SA of Spain. Irving and Repsol are now in site preparation for the $750-million Canaport LNG project in Saint John and also expect to start building soon.

A year ago, experts were debating whether either project would proceed given competing proposals for Maine, Long Island, N.Y., the Quebec City region and Gros Cacouna Island, also in Quebec. Canaport and Bear Head, near Point Tupper, N.S., got environmental approval before their Quebec rivals, and the American proposals have become bogged down in public concern over security and the environment.

A government official pegged the cost of Bear Head facility at about $800-million.

The three-year construction phase of the Maritime plants will be an economic boon in a region where offshore natural gas exploration is declining.

The competing projects are designed to meet the rising demand for natural gas in the northeastern United States by vaporizing liquefied gas, then sending it to New England through a pipeline. Maritimes & Northeast Pipeline, which owns the existing pipeline that transports natural gas from the Sable Island gas field to New England, has also begun the process of obtaining approval for the expansion that will be required to accommodate gas output from both plants.

"We reached an agreement with both groups this past summer and that was really a turning point for us," said Steve Rankin, a spokesman for Maritime & Northeast in Halifax. The company hopes to add enough pipeline capacity for both plants by 2008, the year they are expected to come on stream.

"Total demand in New England and the Maritimes is going to be rising while other supplies [of natural gas] are going to be decreasing," said Jim Lewis, chairman of LNG consultancy PTL Associates in Spring, Tex.

New England now gets most of its natural gas from Texas, but that state's petrochemical industries have grown so much that they use up almost all the natural gas produced locally. That means Texas exports to the north are falling.

What's more, officials say the recent hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico are demonstrating the benefits of having several natural gas sources.

Ideally, Mr. Lewis said, the two new facilities would open about three years apart so they don't bring too much new supply to the market. It appears they will open at about the same time, he said, so there may be a three-year period in which neither is operating at full capacity.

Lee Warren, a spokeswoman for Anadarko, said the company needs to receive a permit from the Nova Scotia Utility and Review Board to construct the plant. Once that is done, she said, "we will pour concrete . . . which we expect to be within the next several weeks." The first step will be the foundation for two massive holding tanks.

Irving spokesman Daniel Goodwin said the Irving and Repsol partnership is still awaiting a few permits and plans. Irving announced its partnership with Repsol in June, with the Spanish company coming aboard to supply LNG for its plant. Mr. Goodwin says lining up a supplier is one of the main hurdles in the whole process. Anadarko is talking with prospective suppliers and expects to award a supply contract this year, Ms. Warren said.

There is also a chance of a third LNG facility in the region. Halifax-based Keltic Petrochemicals Inc. is proposing to build an LNG facility in Goldboro, N.S., as part of a petrochemical plant.



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)11/22/2005 6:54:56 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 919
 
Construction begins on liquid natural gas terminal
Last updated Nov 21 2005 07:06 PM AST
CBC News
Construction began Monday on Nova Scotia's first liquid natural gas plant.

Anadarko Canada received the first in a series of permits from the province's Utilities and Review Board today, and started pouring concrete almost immediately.

The permit allows the company to pour the foundation for its giant LNG storage tanks at Bear Head near Port Hawkesbury on the Strait of Canso.

"The Utilities and Review board had a couple of options," said Nadine Barber, manager of government and public affairs for Anadarko. "It could have granted one big permit, or a series of smaller ones, which is how they've chosen to do it."

"This is the very first time this has been done in the province, so it's important that they wanted to take time and make sure that all the t's are crossed and the i's dotted, and that everyone is comfortable with the way it's moving forward, Barber added."

The LNG plant will bring in liquid natural gas from overseas, turn it back into a gas, and ship it by pipeline to markets, mostly in the northeastern United States.

Construction of the plant is expected to take 3 years and, at its peak, employ 600 people. It will handle about 1 billion cubic feet of liquid natural gas a day. The plant is expected to be ready to open by 2008.

cbc.ca



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)2/10/2006 10:16:47 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 919
 
In the global race to power up LNG plants, firms face supply challenge
N.S.'s Bear Head LNG project has cost $80M so far, with no contract in sight for gas
canadaeast.com

(Via Bloomberg News)
A tanker is loaded with liquid natural gas at the Bontang LNG terminal in the port near East Kalimantan, Indonesia, in this file photo. Energy companies are building similar terminals in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia but only two of them have publicly confirmed they have secure supply contracts.
By Nina Chiarelli
Telegraph-Journal

The race is on to lock down secure and long-term supplies of liquefied natural gas for dozens of proposed LNG plants across North America.

The three LNG projects in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia are well into development even though only two of the projects have publicly confirmed secure supply contracts of natural gas.

Anadarko Petroleum's Bear Head LNG project in Point Tupper, N.S. is still without a firm contract for supply of natural gas even though the company has spent $80 million so far - prompting questions from analysts about the future of the plant.

Bob Daniels, vice-president of exploration and production for the Houston-based company, told analysts in a conference call this week that his company is still doing what it can to secure a supply.

"We've been working the supply options as far as we can. We still have a couple that we're moving forward with, but it has been slower than we anticipated, no doubt about that," he said.

The region's two competing projects have both already outlined supply contracts. Irving Oil partnered with Repsol YPF, the Spanish oil giant with oil fields across Latin America, while Halifax's Keltic Petrochemicals Inc. has partnered with Dutch oil giant Petroplus International B.V.

However, there are as many as 60 projects currently in various stages around North America.

"For many proposed projects, what remains to be seen is the nature of the supply contracts they are able to obtain," said Angela Tu Weissenberger, a natural gas analyst in Calgary. "Short-term contracts might have to suffice until long-term supply commitments are awarded."

Few new natural gas producing plants are being constructed anywhere in the world without long-term contracts for product and destination re-gasification plants in mind, despite countless analyses predicting a surge in demand for LNG.

Even Anadarko CEO James Hackett had to try to mollify analysts on how much the company would spend on its LNG project without a secure contract in place.

"If we don't find an upstream solution in a reasonable period of time we'll look at how we can monetize things," he said. "So, be assured we're not going to let this drag on forever."

In the meantime, both Irving Oil and Keltic Petrochemicals are pushing ahead with their respective projects.

Kevin Dunn, CEO of Keltic, said the company is waiting for a response to regulatory submissions by month end and expects to reveal more of its confidential, multi-year supply agreement with Petroplus after March 15.

"We think it's going really good. But you never want to brag about something because tomorrow it could change," he said.

The Energy Information Administration has estimated world trade of liquefied natural gas will climb to 18 per cent of natural gas consumption by 2020, so whichever company gets to market first will definitely enjoy benefits.

Ms. Tu Weissenberg called it the "first mover" benefit.

"In a growing natural gas market with initially limited supplies, those who can capture market share early will enjoy higher prices, more profitable customers, and potential economies of scale from a well-established presence," she said.

In a report for the Atlantic Institute of Market Studies, Ms. Tu Weissenberger said the Maritimes offers several competitive advantages to move the gas, including accessibility to ports, a proximity to the high-priced northeast American market, and pipeline infrastructure.

Her report calls facilities such as Anadarko's Bear Heard project "merchant terminals" - or ones built without supply or end-user contracts.

"Few project sponsors have attempted this business model because of the revenue risk associated with unpredictable volumes," she said.

At Irving Oil, construction continues on its eastside Saint John Canaport LNG terminal.

Spokeswoman Jennifer Parker declined to comment on the company's contract with Repsol, other than to confirm Repsol will deliver LNG from one of its natural gas fields worldwide.



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (57)7/10/2006 9:53:34 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
Anadarko to sell Bear Head LNG project for $125 mln
Mon Jul 10, 2006 9:16 AM EDT
ca.today.reuters.com

TORONTO (Reuters) - Anadarko Petroleum Corp. (APC.N: Quote) said on Monday it will sell its Bear Head LNG Corp. subsidiary which is developing a liquefied natural gas receiving terminal at Point Tupper, Nova Scotia, for $125 million.

Under the deal with private equity firm U.S. Venture Energy, Anadarko will have an 18-month option to secure up to 350 million cubic feet per day of throughput capacity at competitive rates, the company said.

The transaction is expected to close within a few weeks, and proceeds will be used to repay debt relating to the pending acquisitions of Kerr-McGee Corp. (KMG.N: Quote) and Western Gas Resources Inc. (WGR.N: Quote).

Last month, Anadarko said it would buy Kerr-McGee and Western Gas Resources for a total of $21.1 billion.