ML sekarang juga mulai masuk sektor riil ... hehhe

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Joel Horsley
Date: Jan 3, 2008 9:17 AM

Dear Milis,

 Dari research saya, saya ketemu 2 project LNG di PNG yang akan mulai di
 masa depan. Nomor 1 adalah LNG plant PNG Liquid Niugini Gas yang miliki
 oleh Conoco Phillips gas ini expected in 2012. Yang kedua LNG yang
 miliki Exxon Mobil dan gas ini expected 2013.

 Apakah kalian pikir PNG cukup kuat untuk 2 LNG plants?

 Di bawa ada 2 article tentang project ini, Kalau anda sedang kerja di
 project ini, ada informasi tambahan atau punya teman yang kerja di
 project ini tolong bantu saya ya!

 Bechtel and CB&I get set for final showdown at Liquid Niugini Gas

 Liquid Niugini Gas is near to selecting either Bechtel or CB&I for the
 major turnkey contract on its planned $5 billion to $7 billion liquefied
 natural gas project in Papua New Guinea, writes Russell Searancke.

 Liquid Niugini Gas is the PNG-based entity that will own and operate the
 facility on behalf of its owners InterOil, Merrill Lynch and Pacific
 LNG.

 Sources said it has been a close-run competition between Bechtel and
 CB&I, with the former pushing the Cascade liquefaction technology it
 promotes with creator ConocoPhillips, and CB&I offering Air Products'
 technology.

 The winner will be the project's downstream contractor, responsible for
 a compression station near the south coast, 36-inch onshore and offshore
 gas pipelines, the LNG processing plant near InterOil's refinery at Napa
 Napa, and a liquids facility.

 Liquid Niugini Gas chief executive Jack Hamilton said the company is in
 the final stages of talks with its favoured contractor and is aiming to
 close this out before Christmas.

 The plan is to start front-end engineering and design in early 2008, but
 before this happens the partners require project agreements with the PNG
 government, and the schedule was looking "tight", said Hamilton. Unlike
 upstream developments in PNG, the state does not have a back-in right to
 Liquid Niugini Gas' scheme, but the operator has given the government an
 option of a 10% stake in the project.

 InterOil is responsible for the upstream side of the project, said
 Hamilton, and will source its own contractor or contractors.

 Hamilton reiterated that the company is eager to fast track its project
 to deliver first LNG by 2012 at the latest.

 "We're focused on 2012," he said, adding that "it means we can get ahead
 of the wave of LNG projects in the region" including Australia and
 Sakhalin, in Russia's far east.

 The project calls for a two-train, 9 million tonnes per annum
 liquefaction plant with processing capacity of a nominal 1.6 billion
 cubic feet per day of gas, condensate and natural gas liquids.

 Merrill Lynch has committed to buy the entire output from the project's
 first train, for sale in the US, while the second train will be marketed
 in Asia.

 LNG market watchers are cautious about the proposals to use InterOil's
 Elk field to provide the project's gas feedstock, but InterOil and
 Liquid Niugini Gas are bullish about the resource.

 Hamilton said gas-in-place reserves at Elk are between 3.5 trillion
 cubic feet and 18 Tcf. "With Elk success, this is a standalone project
 able to proceed now," he said.

 InterOil recently spudded the Elk-4 appraisal well, which is designed to
 drill the high-pressure gas column at the Elk-1 discovery well and to
 intersect the underlying Antelope structure.

 Hamilton said the continued appraisal of Elk will determine the need and
 speed for third-party gas, if any, based on a minimum requirement of 4
 Tcf for the first train.

 The project is modelled on the Marathon-led Equatorial Guinea LNG scheme
 that delivered first shipments this year.

 InterOil boss Phil Mulacek told analysts recently of Marathon's "unique"
 strategy in Equatorial Guinea. He said Marathon began FEED at about 2
 Tcf, "and while they were building the plant... they went into a firm
 final investment position".

 Liquid Niugini Gas' model mirrors this approach, and could lead to
 construction kicking off before a final investment decision. Hamilton
 said the company's construction strategy would likely see the
 compression station built offshore and shipped to PNG in modules, but
 the LNG plant and liquids facility were likely to be built in PNG from
 the ground up.

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 KBR eyes PNG prize

 RUSSELL SEARANCKE, Wellington

 KBR is standing by to provide a leading upstream and downstream role in
 ExxonMobil's proposed $10 billion liquefied natural gas project in Papua
 New Guinea.

 The US company is understood to have the upstream aspect of the project
 sewn up through its EoS joint venture with WorleyParsons, while on the
 downstream LNG side, KBR and Japan's JGC Corporation have a competitive
 edge over Bechtel, the only rival for the job.

 At stake is a principal role as the front-end engineering and design
 contractor, with the lucrative and prestigious project management
 contracts to follow.

 Sources said there is a fair amount of predictability about KBR being
 successful on both upstream and downstream fronts.

 On the upstream side, the EoS alliance was ExxonMobil's FEED contractor
 for the precursor to the LNG project the failed PNG-to-Australia gas
 pipeline scheme.

 EoS carried out a full FEED for the PNG-to-Australia project covering
 all the facility requirements in PNG including onshore and offshore
 pipelines.

 Notwithstanding EoS' understanding of the upstream needs for
 ExxonMobil's LNG scheme, the upstream component is elaborate and
 complex.

 It is technically difficult because the project's gas fields are in the
 rugged jungles of the Southern Highlands.

 There is no existing natural gas infrastructure in PNG. The country
 produces about 50,000 barrels per day of oil and a small amount of gas
 for a local mine.

 A 311-kilometre 32-inch onshore gas pipeline will carry gas to a station
 on PNG's south coast. From there, a 400-kilometre 32-inch subsea
 pipeline will send the gas to the planned onshore LNG plant at Konebada,
 Port Moresby.

 ExxonMobil has not yet committed to FEED. This is likely in the first
 quarter of 2008 once certain government and joint venture approvals are
 dealt with.

 The EoS team will polish up the FEED work it has already completed then
 help ExxonMobil put together invitations to bid for lumpsum turnkey
 construction and installation contracts, said sources. On the downstream
 side, KBR-JGC and Bechtel have carried out parallel pre-FEED studies for
 ExxonMobil.

 Sources said it looked inevitable that KBR will get the nod ahead of
 Bechtel for the large downstream role, and that JGC's services may not
 be required.

 The pre-FEED work considered a single large train of up to 6.3 million
 tpa and dual smaller trains.

 It is understood that KBR offered Air Products' liquefaction technology
 while Bechtel proposed the Cascade technique, which was created by
 ConocoPhillips and is promoted in partnership with Bechtel.

 Like the upstream side of the project, the downstream component has many
 challenges.

 ExxonMobil has not yet indicated its preferred construction model for
 the LNG plant. Sources suggested that building the plant from the ground
 up is the likely avenue.

 Project co-venturer Oil Search said recently that a "material offloading
 facility" will be built for the transfer of equipment and materials
 during construction and operations.

 Supporting facilities and infrastructure will include a large camp to
 support about 7500 construction staff and 500 operations personnel.

 Major upgrades of existing roads to Port Moresby and around the LNG
 facility will also be needed. Meanwhile, ExxonMobil is working hard with
 its co-venturers and the government to settle several issues prior to
 embarking on FEED, including a unitisation agreement and fiscal terms.

 Well-placed sources said these talks are going according to plan, and
 there are no stumbling blocks anticipated seeing as the co-venturers and
 government are obsessed with commercialising their stranded gas reserves
 as soon as possible.

 The project partners want to make a financial investment decision in
 2008 and deliver first LNG exports in 2013. However, the state stands to
 earn a stake of between 18% and 20% once it exercises its back-in
 rights.

 The LNG project may need between 10 Tcf and 12 Tcf of gas reserves
 during its lifetime.

 Gas is earmarked to come from the ExxonMobil-operated Hides, Juha and
 Angore fields, and possibly the Oil Search-operated Kutubu, Agogo, Moran
 and Gobe fields.

 Saya harap informasi ini berguna,

 Salam,

 Joel Horsley,

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