Malaysia’s Genting signs $1.3 billion deal for floating LNG facility with Chinese firm
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(From left) Genting chief operating officer Tan Kong Han, Genting chairman Lim Kok Thay and Wison chairman Liu Hongjun at the press conference in Kuala Lumpur on June 20.
PHOTO: THE BUSINESS TIMES
KUALA LUMPUR - Genting has signed a US$962.8 million (S$1.3 billion) deal for a floating liquefied natural gas (LNG) facility from China’s Wison New Energies, the Malaysian company said on June 20.
The facility, to be used in Indonesia’s West Papua region, will have a capacity of 1.2 million metric tons per annum with the first drop scheduled for the third quarter of 2026, Genting said in a statement. Wison will construct the facility at its shipyards in Nantong and Zhoushan, China.
Feedgas for the floating facility will be supplied from the Asap, Merah and Kido structures within the Kasuri gas block concession area, Genting said.
Genting president and chief operating officer Tan Kong Han said at a press conference that the company had “very significant success” and encountered hydrocarbons from exploratory drilling in its West Papua gas block. “We have had a lot of very significant success on this block. We drilled 10 wells, all 10 wells have encountered hydrocarbons,” he said.
Genting Oil Kasuri, a Genting subsidiary, had signed a production-sharing contract for the Kasuri block and discovered gas there in 2011.
Of the gas in the Kasuri block, 101 million standard cubic feet per day (mmscfd) will be supplied to an ammonia and urea plant to be built in West Papua for 17 years, while 230 mmscfd of gas will go to the floating LNG facility for 18 years, the statement said.
While Genting did not specify clients for the gas offtake from the floating LNG facility, Datuk Seri Tan said the company was “engaged in discussions” with buyers like Shell and BP. REUTERS


