ExxonMobil starts production from Kipper Tuna Turrum in Bass Strait

Oct. 24, 2013
ExxonMobil has started production from the Kipper Tuna Turrum project in the Bass Strait offshore Victoria, Australia.

Offshore staff

MELBOURNE, Australia– ExxonMobil has started production from the Kipper Tuna Turrum project in the Bass Strait offshore Victoria, Australia. Natural gas production has commenced from the Tuna field via two new pipelines and oil is being produced from the Turrum field through the new Marlin B platform.

Operated by ExxonMobil subsidiary, Esso Australia Resources Pty Ltd., the $4.5-billion Kipper Tuna Turrum project is thelargest domestic oil and gas development on the eastern seaboard. Production from the project will help maintain current gas production levels from Bass Strait, which have been producing for more than 40 years.

Kipper production is expected to come online in 2016, following the installation of mercury removal facilities.

The Turrum and Tuna projects are part of the Gippsland Basin Joint Venture, in which Esso Australia Resources Pty Ltd. and BHP Billiton Petroleum (Bass Strait) Pty Ltd. each have a 50% interest. The Kipper venture participants are Esso Australia Resources Pty Ltd. (32.5% and operator) and subsidiaries of BHP Billiton (32.5%) and Santos Limited (35%).

“The Kipper Tuna Turrum project will help secure east Australia’s energy future, and holds enough energy to power a city of a million people for 35 years,” said Richard Owen, chairman of ExxonMobil Australia. “Development of Australia’s natural gas resources will also yield significant environmental benefits. Natural gas is cleaner-burning and, when used to generate electricity, can reduce carbon dioxide emissions by up to 60%.”

Owen said that 1,300 full time jobs were sustained during the construction and installation phase, and that the Australian content for the project has reached an estimated $2.8 billion.

10/24/2013