Shell confident of China deal (Shenzhen Daily/Agencies) Updated: 2005-06-03 14:58
Royal Dutch/Shell Group said Thursday that it was confident of signing a
multi billion US dollar liquefied natural gas (LNG) sales deal with China at its
Gorgon venture, offshore western Australia, despite recent holdups in the
long-running talks.
"Discussions are continuing and we're still as confident as we've ever been
that we will get them to conclusion at some time," said Tim Warren, chairman of
Shell Australia.
But Shell is unable to say when a deal with China will reach fruition. "These
LNG deals are long-term contracts that take time," Warren said.
"I think that both sides would rather get it right than actually set a
deadline," he said.
The Gorgon partners signed an initial 30 billion Australian dollars (US$22.72
billion) agreement in October 2003 to supply as much as 100 million tons of LNG
to China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC) over 25 years.
A combined ownership and gas offtake deal was meant to be finalized with
CNOOC by the end of last year. The talks also failed to meet a subsequent March
31, 2005 deadline.
The talks were complicated by an ownership restructure at Gorgon in April
that doubled the amount of gas that can be marketed to customers after inclusion
of the large Jansz field.
Shell owns 25 percent of the 11-billion-Australian-dollars Gorgon venture,
which is 50 percent owned and operated by Chevron Corp. The third partner is
ExxonMobil Corp.
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