Beetaloo gives green light to first gas at mammoth NT play

Andrew ToddSponsored
Camera IconBeetaloo Energy’s Carpentaria-5H well within the mammoth Beetaloo sub-basin in the Northern Territory. Credit: File

Beetaloo Energy has cleared the last hurdle to development at its Carpentaria pilot project in the Northern Territory, taking a final investment decision (FID) on commercialisation and clearing the way to first gas flows from the mammoth Beetaloo Sub-basin.

The move caps off a string of regulatory wins for the company, which is on a fast track to deliver gas into a hungry NT gas market, facing acute supply shortages.

Beetaloo’s FID hinged on a series of recently locked-in milestones, including a Beneficial Use of Gas agreement with the Northern Land Council in June on behalf of the Mambaliya Rrumburriya Wuyaliya Aboriginal Land Trust (MRWALT), enabling the sale of its gas, which is set to flow by mid next year.

Earlier this week, the company also secured Federal approval, which immediately led to the final Northern Territory environmental approvals for Carpentaria. This covers the construction of the gas plant, associated in-field infrastructure and the completion of up to 10 additional wells in the permit.

With all the paperwork now in the bag, the company finally has the regulatory backbone to monetise its abundant early gas volumes.

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The company says the project’s rapid and recent progress underscores the crucial role Beetaloo will play in addressing the Territory’s looming gas shortfall. As ENI’s Blacktip offshore field continues to underperform, the Territory has seemingly been forced into importing an emergency supply from Queensland.

With over 90 per cent of the Territory’s electricity relying on gas-fired generation, new supply from Beetaloo could ease pressure on local energy prices and bolster security in short order.

We have already commenced the civil construction and upgrade works on the CGP utilizing internal capital resources. That work is continuing. We have separately commenced the process to drawdown the $30M Macquarie Midstream Infrastructure Facility which was announced in November 2024 and we intend to draw funds under that facility when required.

Beetaloo Energy managing director Alex

Beetaloo controls a vast 28.9 million acres across the McArthur Basin and Beetaloo Sub-basin in the heart of the Northern Territory. Its holdings encompass the thickest known section of the Velkerri Shales, averaging 300 metres in gross thickness, making it a prime zone for long-life shale gas extraction.

Independent evaluations have certified a substantial 1.6 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of contingent dry gas in the reliable 2C category, indicating the promising scale of Beetaloo’s address, with solid recovery and flow prospectivity.

Beetaloo says this is just the tip of the iceberg in the broader sub-basin, which is estimated to harbour more than 200 Tcf of gas, placing Beetaloo at the forefront of what could emerge as one of Australia’s key onshore energy developments for reliable gas reserves.

Under its 2024 gas sales deal with the government, Beetaloo is committed to supplying a minimum of 25 terajoules (TJ) a day to the NT, with flexibility to increase to 35 TJ as output builds across its 10 additional wells.

Once operational, gas from the Carpentaria project will flow into the McArthur River pipeline, feeding directly into the Territory’s grid and generating royalties for local communities.

The swift timeline from approvals to FID highlights Beetaloo’s critical role in Australia’s gas supply future, positioning it to supply potentially several hungry markets well ahead of its expansive basin commercialisation.

With infrastructure funding already unlocked and civil works advancing, the company has now officially shifted from explorer to producer as it jostles to become one of Australia’s big industry players.

Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact: matt.birney@wanews.com.au

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