Australia Backs Long-Term Gas Exploration

May 8, 2024

Australia's resources minister said on Thursday she backs the long-term exploration of potential natural gas projects, setting up a potential clash with opposition lawmakers and some in the incumbent Labor Party that oppose its use.

Australia, one of the world's largest producers of liquefied natural gas (LNG), is committed to reducing its emissions to net zero by 2050.

Source: Woodside
Source: Woodside

But Resources Minister Madeline King said in a column in the Australian Financial Review on Thursday, ahead of the launch of the government's Future Gas Strategy, that "gas is needed out to 2050 and beyond."

"The energy transformation will take time – it will take investment in renewables, new industry processes, new technologies," she said.

Australia supplies around a fifth of global LNG supply shipped last year, with the largest projects run by Chevron and Woodside Energy Group in Western Australia.

Woodside is developing the Scarborough LNG project in Western Australia and the Beetaloo Basin in the Northern Territory, both of which have faced strong opposition from environmental campaigners.

"The strategy also makes it clear that we can't rely on past investments to get us through the next decades, as existing fields deplete," King said.

"That will mean a continued commitment to exploration, and an openness to the kinds of foreign investment that have helped build the industry into the powerhouse it is today."

The Labor Party led by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who faces re-election in a federal poll due next year, is reliant on the Greens and independent lawmakers to pass legislation in the Senate, the upper house of parliament, where Labor lacks a majority.


(Reuters - Reporting by Alasdair Pal in Sydney; Editing by Richard Chang)

Related News

World Leaders, Veterans Commemorate D-Day's 80th Anniversary North Star Eyes 40 Hybrid SOVs by 2040 with New Funding in Its Pockets New York Finalizes Offshore Wind Contracts for Equinor, Orsted Projects Sanctioned Tankers Pose Rising Environmental Risk Navies Are Stepping Up to Deter Houthi Red Sea Attacks