A powerful cyclone has forced production cuts across key Australian gas export plants, adding pressure to global energy markets already in short supply due to the war in the Middle East choking oil and gas flows.
Workers have been evacuated from Chevron’s Wheatstone gas platform – 225 kilometres off the coast of Western Australia – and liquefied natural gas (LNG) production has halted while Tropical Cyclone Narelle sweeps the region. The storm’s reach had extended to Chevron’s huge Gorgon gas plant on nearby Barrow Island, forcing the shutdown of one of its three LNG-production units, the company said.
Woodside Energy, the largest Australian LNG company, said on Friday it had demobilised its workforce from its North West Shelf offshore platforms that feed the Karratha Gas Plant, disrupting production.
Together, the affected projects on WA’s resource-rich coast account for as much as 8 per cent of global supplies of LNG, natural gas that has been super-chilled until it turns into a liquid so it can be shipped around the world.
The outages come at a time when demand and prices for cargoes of the fuel are rocketing amid the blockage of oil and gas tankers in the Strait of Hormuz off Iran’s southern coast, and missile strikes damaging major LNG facilities in Qatar.
Countries across Asia are particularly reliant on Qatari LNG shipped through the strait to power their heaters and electric grids and are increasingly looking to Australia – the world’s third-largest supplier of LNG, behind Qatar – to make up for the drop-off in shipments.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is seeking to leverage Australia’s role as a major LNG producer to make sure the country isn’t left behind in the global oil supply crunch.
“Our gas exports are very important in the region,” Albanese said on Friday. “Australia is a reliable supplier. We expect reciprocation in economic relations.”
A spokesperson for Chevron Australia said Gorgon’s remaining two LNG-production units and its domestic gas facility continued to operate. The company said it would resume full production at both “once it is safe to do so”.
“Chevron Australia is working to restore production at the Gorgon and Wheatstone gas facilities following production outages,” a spokesperson said.
Perth-based Woodside said it continued to produce gas at its offshore Macedon gasfield and Pluto LNG plant. The company expects production at the North West Shelf to resume once workers can return to its offshore facilities.
“Our priority is the safety of our people, the environment and our assets,” a Woodside spokesperson said.
“If there is any material impact to production or assets, Woodside will update the market in accordance with its continuous disclosure obligations.”
Since the war on Iran began on February 28, one-off LNG cargoes from Australian projects are said to have sold for more than double their pre-conflict prices, fetching up to $US25 ($35) per million British thermal units.
UBS energy analyst Tom Allen said the bank had lifted its forecasts for one-off cargoes of LNG in the North Asian market from $US13 per million British thermal units to $US23.60 for the rest of the year following attacks on Qatar’s Ras Laffan LNG hub. He said two of that plant’s 14 gas-processing trains might take “three to five years” to repair.
Even though Australia is a huge natural gas producer and exporter, price rises on global markets could also drag costs higher for Australian gas buyers if the increases hold, as LNG price swings influence local supply contracts. When LNG demand soared in 2022 amid the fallout of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, spiking gas prices became a major driver of a double-digit increase in household energy bills.
Resources Minister Madeleine King said the Australian gas market would be better insulated from the risk of price shocks this time compared with 2022 because of tougher requirements for exporters to improve supply for the local market.
But she said she wouldn’t deny that “there can be ripple effects”.
“We really have to keep a watchful eye on that,” she said.
The Business Briefing newsletter delivers major stories, exclusive coverage and expert opinion. Sign up to get it every weekday morning


