Latest news with #Sangomar
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
JERA and Woodside Energy Group (WDS) Signs a Deal
Woodside Energy Group Ltd (NYSE:WDS) is one of the 7 Best ASX Stocks to Buy Now. On June 20, Reuters highlighted that Japan's biggest power generator, JERA, and Australia's Woodside Energy Group Ltd (NYSE:WDS) have signed a deal in which Woodside will supply JERA with liquefied natural gas only during the winter months. As per the deal, Woodside Energy Group Ltd (NYSE:WDS) will supply ~200,000 metric tons of LNG annually during the December to February period, beginning in FY 2027. The deal is for 5 years. A worker in safety gear with a drill rig in a sprawling oilfield. As per Yuya Hasegawa, a director at the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, this agreement is unusual as it covers only 3 months of the year rather than the whole year, which a regular term contract would have covered. In Q1 2025, Woodside Energy Group Ltd (NYSE:WDS) maintained its strong operational performance throughout the portfolio of high-quality assets, and Sangomar further boosted quarterly revenue via exceptional production of 78 thousand barrels per day at ~98% reliability. At the Beaumont New Ammonia Project, pre-commissioning activities are projected to start in Q2 2025, and the startup is targeted for H2 of the year. Therefore, the value-creating opportunity is expected to deliver returns above its capital allocation framework and will place Woodside Energy Group Ltd (NYSE:WDS) competitively amidst the growing market for lower-carbon ammonia. While we acknowledge the potential of WDS to grow, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than WDS and that has 100x upside potential, check out our report about this cheapest AI stock. READ NEXT: 13 Cheap AI Stocks to Buy According to Analysts and 11 Unstoppable Growth Stocks to Invest in Now Disclosure: None.


Bloomberg
03-06-2025
- Business
- Bloomberg
Woodside Files for Arbitration in Senegal Over Sangomar Oil Tax
Woodside Energy Group Ltd. opened an arbitration case against Senegal to resolve a tax dispute related to its Sangomar oil project. The company started producing oil last year from the offshore field, just as the government stepped up scrutiny of natural-resource contracts awarded to foreign investors to ensure they 'match Senegal's interests.'


Reuters
02-06-2025
- Business
- Reuters
Woodside Energy seeks arbitration in dispute with Senegal
DAKAR, June 2 (Reuters) - Australia's Woodside Energy ( opens new tab has filed a request for international arbitration with the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) given the lack of resolution on certain matters with Senegal, a spokesperson for the company said on Monday. "Woodside strongly believes we have acted in accordance with applicable regulations, the Sangomar Production Sharing Contract and the Host Government Agreement, and there are no outstanding taxes payable," the company told Reuters via email.


Reuters
02-06-2025
- Business
- Reuters
Woodside Energy files arbitration proceedings against Senegal
DAKAR, June 2 (Reuters) - Australia's Woodside Energy ( opens new tab, which operates Senegal's Sangomar oil and gas field, has filed a complaint with the World Bank's International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, a filing seen by Reuters showed on Monday. The complaint filed on May 30, named Senegal's Ministry of Petroleum and Energy as the respondent. It gave no further details. The company, which holds an 82% participating interest in Senegal's first offshore project, filed a court action in the country last August over a tax assessment dispute.
Yahoo
23-04-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Woodside weighs Trump tariff impact on $1.2 billion Louisiana LNG project
By Christine Chen and Roshan Thomas SYDNEY (Reuters) -Woodside Energy , Australia's top gas producer, said on Wednesday it was assessing the impact of U.S. tariffs and other trade measures on its Louisiana liquefied natural gas plant project as it inches towards a final go-ahead. Woodside acquired the project, formerly called Driftwood, from Tellurian for $1.2 billion last year to position itself as a 'global LNG powerhouse'. The first of four development phases is expected to cost $16 billion. In a quarterly update, CEO Meg O'Neill said the company was 'assessing the potential impacts of recent tariff announcements and potential further trade measures on Louisiana LNG', after U.S. President Donald Trump imposed universal tariffs on nearly all trading partners this month. O'Neill said the plant was in a foreign-trade zone which allowed it to defer payment of tariffs until each LNG train was completed. However, around half of the equipment and materials needed to develop the project would need to be imported. 'Around 25% of Louisiana LNG's estimated capital expenditure is equipment and materials, approximately half of which is currently expected to be sourced from the U.S.,' she said. "If energy prices come under further pressure as a result of tariff-related growth pressures, it could make things trickier for Woodside down the track," said Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade Global. To improve the project's economics, Woodside announced earlier this month it sold a 40% interest in Louisiana LNG's export terminal to U.S. investment firm Stonepeak, funding 75% of the project's spending in 2025 and 2026. It also signed its first offtake agreement with Germany's Uniper for 1 million tonnes per annum last week. 'We are pleased with the strong level of interest from potential strategic partners and are advancing discussions targeting further equity sell-down,' O'Neill said. 'We are progressing at pace towards a final investment decision on Louisiana LNG, positioning Woodside as a global LNG powerhouse.' The update comes as the company reported revenue of $3.32 billion for the quarter ended March 31 on strong gas hub-linked prices and the start-up of its Senegal-based Sangomar project. The result beat a Visible Alpha consensus estimate of $2.79 billion and was up 13% from the $2.95 billion reported a year ago. On a quarterly basis, the firm reported a decline of 5% in revenue, attributed to a fall in oil-linked prices, cyclone impacts at its North West Shelf project and unplanned train outages at its Pluto LNG project. Shares of the company rose as much as 3.9% to A$20.470 as of 0036 GMT, while the broader energy sub-index gained 3.1%, tracking a rise in global oil prices. Woodside kept its 2025 production and capital expenditure forecast unchanged. Sign in to access your portfolio