-- Lower net profit of US$812 million reflects costs incurred in
Pluto start-up
-- Drilling to support Pluto expansion disappoints, to halt
program for now
-- Upgrades 2012 production target to 77 million-83 million
BOE
(Recasts lead, adds background on LNG industry and Woodside
project portfolio in fifth-eighth paragraphs, CEO quote in ninth
paragraph, share price reaction in 13th paragraph)
By David Winning
SYDNEY--Woodside Petroleum Ltd.'s (WPL.AU) hopes of capitalizing
on booming Asian demand for natural gas by expanding its flagship
Pluto export terminal in Western Australia has been dealt a major
blow after a drilling campaign failed to find enough new
reserves.
Woodside is now banking on talks with rival companies with
natural gas discoveries nearby the 14.9 billion Australian dollar
(US$15.6 billion) Pluto project to support an expansion, after it
said Wednesday it will pause its own drilling program and seek new
exploration blocks.
The downbeat outlook for expanding Pluto came as
Woodside--Australia's second-largest oil and gas producer by output
after BHP Billiton Ltd. (BHP)--reported a 1.9% decline in net
profit to US$812 million for the six months through June 30. The
earnings decline largely was due to Woodside needing to buy cargoes
of liquefied natural gas, or LNG, to fulfil contracts with Japanese
customers after an earlier delay to commissioning Pluto.
However, Woodside sounded a positive note on production after
Pluto outperformed expectations since April and it rescheduled
maintenance at the Vincent oil field to next year. It now expects
to produce between 77 million and 83 million barrels of oil
equivalent this year, up from earlier guidance of up to 81 million
BOE.
Rapid industrialization in Asia and global concerns over climate
change are transforming the energy industry, prompting companies
like Woodside and ExxonMobil Corp. (XOM) to bet billions of dollars
on natural gas playing a critical role in meeting the world's
future energy needs.
Pluto is Australia's third operating LNG plant after the
Woodside-led North West Shelf project and ConocoPhillips's (COP)
Darwin LNG project, and there are at least eight more gas-export
plants planned along Australia's coastline at a combined cost of
more than US$175 billion.
The investment boom puts Australia on course to overtake Qatar
as the world's biggest exporter of LNG by the end of the decade.
But it's also heaping pressure on an already stretched resources
services sector as LNG projects compete with big mining
developments in Queensland state and Western Australia for pipe
layers, welders and engineers.
In addition to Pluto and the North West Shelf, Woodside wants to
lead development of two other huge LNG projects--Browse, which
analysts think could cost around US$30 billion, and Sunrise, a gas
resource that straddles the territorial waters of Australia and
East Timor.
Because of the high fixed costs in acquiring land and installing
infrastructure on site, energy companies typically can generate
higher returns on investment by adding processing units, or trains,
to LNG facilities already built.
"With regard to Pluto expansion, the current phase of
exploration drilling to support additional trains has concluded
without discovering the volume of commercial gas that is required
to endorse a final investment decision at this point in time,"
Peter Coleman, Woodside's chief executive, said in a statement to
the Australian Securities Exchange.
Competing projects such as Gorgon and Wheatstone--both operated
by Chevron Corp. (CVX) and under construction--aim to expand
capacity in stages to as much as 25 million tons of LNG a year
each. In comparison, Pluto is currently much smaller with a single
processing unit capable of producing 4.3 million tons of LNG
annually.
Woodside said its underlying profit, which is closely watched by
analysts because it strips out one-off items, rose 4.5% to US$865
million in the first half. That was lower than the US$885 million
average of seven analyst forecasts compiled by Dow Jones
Newswires.
Under Mr. Coleman, Woodside is also looking to reduce its
reliance on Australia for growth by securing exploration acreage
overseas.
Woodside has joined a consortium bidding for exploration rights
offshore Cyprus, with the outcome expected by the end of this year,
and said Wednesday it has begun a "series of global basin
studies".
"As part of this review Woodside is currently examining
opportunities in the Eastern Mediterranean, South East Asia and the
Americas," the Perth-based company said.
At 0205 GMT, Woodside shares were down A$1.08, or 3%, at
A$34.92.
-Write to David Winning at david.winning@wsj.com
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