
ExxonMobil Australia, Woodside approve final investment decision for $221 million gas project
The approval is for the A$350 million ($221.31 million) project, which aims to drill five new wells in the Turrum and North Turrum gas fields.
The Reuters Power Up newsletter provides everything you need to know about the global energy industry. Sign up here.
Earlier this year, Australia's competition regulator flagged that the east coast could face gas shortage supply from 2027, potentially leading to gas imports. The shortfall is expected due to structural decline and uncertainty surrounding future investments.
"While depletion of the Gippsland Basin is inevitable, projects such as Turrum will ensure Bass Strait continues to produce gas for the domestic market past 2030," said Simon Younger, Chair of ExxonMobil Australia in an emailed response to Reuters.
The Gippsland Basin joint venture is a 50-50 joint venture between Esso Australia Resources and Woodside Energy (Bass Strait), and operated by Esso Australia.
"The Turrum Phase 3 project, and the recently approved Kipper 1B project, will unlock additional gas that is needed to avoid future shortfalls," said Liz Westcott, Woodside's executive vice president and chief operating officer for its Australian operations in a separate statement.
"Every molecule of gas Woodside supplies from the Bass Strait fields is sold into the Australian domestic market for local manufacturers, power generators and homes."
($1 = 1.5815 Australian dollars)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
2 minutes ago
- Reuters
Trading platform eToro's CEO highlights retail investor surge as profit beats estimates
Aug 12 (Reuters) - Stock and crypto trading platform eToro's CEO said on Tuesday that retail investors seized opportunities to buy stocks during the April market dip caused by tariffs, after the fintech firm exceeded second-quarter profit estimates. Markets saw sharp swings after U.S. President Donald Trump announced new tariffs early in the quarter, yet analysts observed that individual investors were not deterred by the volatility and quickly sought opportunities to "buy the dip." "We saw a lot of our retail investors jumping in to scoop opportunities with Google, Nvidia and Tesla," eToro CEO Yoni Assia said in an interview with Reuters, referring to the sharp slide in high-growth big tech stocks following April's tariff announcements. "This reminds us of what we've seen in COVID, where institutional investors are pulling out of the markets and retail investors are taking that opportunity and investing." Trading in stocks has since normalized, executives said, sending the company's shares down 8%. Analysts said the stock's slide reflected high expectations ahead of the results. The company went public in May in a bumper U.S. initial public offering, with shares surging on their debut after pricing above the marketed range. "Today's initial eToro excitement gave way to a touch of disappointment," said Michael Ashley Schulman, partner and CIO at Running Point Capital Advisors. "Management admitted the April tariff‑shock uptick in trading activity faded by July, so the beat didn't come with a sustainably higher run‑rate." Financial technology companies have been expanding their crypto product portfolios as regulatory clarity emerges in the key U.S. market under the Trump administration. EToro said crypto activity strengthened in July as bitcoin reached all-time highs, propelling several other tokens. New-age fintech platforms have taken market share from established Wall Street firms by luring younger, tech-savvy investors. "Regulators all around the world are also looking at what regulators in the U.S. are doing and saying," Assia said. "They're providing very sort of clear messaging, which is, crypto is here to stay." He added that the company will eventually cater to more sophisticated users as its product expansion, including AI strategies, gathers pace, moving beyond its core retail trading roots. Founded in 2007, eToro operates a trading platform that allows users to invest in stocks, cryptocurrencies and other assets while mirroring the strategies of top investors. eToro posted an adjusted profit of 56 cents per share in the three months ended June 30, beating estimates of 50 cents, according to estimates compiled by LSEG.


Reuters
19 minutes ago
- Reuters
Kenya central bank cuts rates for seventh time with inflation in target
NAIROBI, Aug 12 (Reuters) - Kenya's central bank lowered its benchmark lending rate (KECBIR=ECI), opens new tab by 25 basis points on Tuesday, saying there was room to ease monetary policy further as inflation remains well within target. The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) cut its policy rate to 9.50% from 9.75% previously, the seventh cut in a row. The decision was in line with the median forecast in a Reuters poll of economists. "The (Monetary Policy) Committee ... concluded that there was scope for a further easing of the monetary policy stance to augment the previous policy actions aimed at stimulating lending by banks to the private sector," the CBK said in a statement. Consumer inflation (KECPI=ECI), opens new tab rose to 4.1% year-on-year in July, compared with 3.8% the previous month, but it remains well within the central bank's preferred 2.5% to 7.5% band. Though price pressures have been contained, the East African country's public finances have been under pressure because of heavy debt repayments and revenue underperformance. The CBK left its economic growth forecasts for this year and next unchanged, at 5.2% and 5.4%, respectively. It also maintained its projection for this year's current account deficit, estimating it at 1.5% of gross domestic product (GDP) compared to 1.3% of GDP last year.


Reuters
21 minutes ago
- Reuters
South Korea's Lee, Trump to hold August 25 summit on security alliance, economy
SEOUL, Aug 12 (Reuters) - South Korean President Lee Jae Myung and U.S. President Donald Trump will hold their first summit meeting on August 25 in Washington to discuss strengthening the countries' alliance and economic security partnership, Lee's office said on Tuesday. Lee, who was elected president in a snap election in June, has made it a top priority to help his export-dependent country navigate the dramatic changes in the global trading environment triggered by Trump's tariff policies. "The two leaders will discuss ways to develop the U.S.-South Korea alliance into a comprehensive strategic alliance of the future in response to the changing international security and economic environment," presidential spokesperson Kang Yu-jung told a briefing. Based on the tariff deal reached last month, the two leaders will advance partnership in the manufacturing sector, including in semiconductors, batteries and shipbuilding, as well as critical minerals and technology, Kang said. A White House official also confirmed the meeting. Trump announced on July 30 that the countries had reached a trade deal that would subject South Korean goods to 15% import duties, lowering the tariff he had initially set against one of America's top trading partners. In return, Trump has said that South Korea will announce investment plans at the upcoming summit and that Seoul had committed to making $350 billion of investments to be "selected" by him. South Korean officials have offered differing details, however, and topics left unresolved by the deal - which has yet to be committed to writing - provide scope for more disputes between the allies. Trump may use the summit to seek more concessions on defence costs and corporate investments, left out of the deal, while non-tariff barriers and currency could prove thorny issues, experts said. Defence costs are expected to emerge as a key issue during the upcoming summit, with Trump having long said South Korea needed to pay more for the roughly 28,500 American troops based there as a legacy of the 1950-1953 Korean War. The Washington Post reported on Saturday that the Trump administration wanted Seoul to boost defence spending to 3.8 percent of GDP, up from 2.6 percent last year, and to increase its $1 billion-plus contribution toward the troops. Jeremy Chan, a senior analyst at the Eurasia Group, said it was unclear if such issues will be raised directly by Trump, but he said he expected that at least at the working level, discussions are going to move beyond trade and investment to the broader alliance. "I think it is more likely that Trump and his team are going to raise at least quietly, issues related to the security alliance," he said. "So that could be putting pressure on President Lee to increase the defence share of government spending."