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Mega India-backed coal project awarded Australian mining leases
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) April 3, 2016


Australian company Santos charting new path
Adelaide, Australia (UPI) Apr 1, 2016 - Australian energy company Santos said Friday it drafted a new team of executives tasked with setting up an operating model to navigate the low oil price era.

The company said it appointed six new members to an executive team with expertise ranging from exploration to capital development. Reporting to CEO Kevin Gallagher, the company said top management would work to move Santos through the depressed market.

"The appointment of the executive team is a key step in establishing a new operating model for Santos that is focused on both lifting productivity and driving long-term value for shareholders in a low oil price environment," Gallagher said in a statement.

David Knox stepped down as CEO of the company in 2015 after seven years on the job. Marking his departure, he said the move was appropriate as the company takes the "appropriate steps" to cut operating costs.

The company last year reported heavy losses in net profits and capital expenditures, reflecting the substantial slump in crude oil prices. Oil prices have been relatively stable, hovering at or near $40 per barrel for several weeks. The price, however, is more than 60 percent below peak levels from 2014.

Chinese gas distributor ENN Group introduced a proposal last month to take in 11.7 percent in the shares in Santos held by Hony Capital. ENN is the largest gas distributor in China.

Santos leads an $18.5 billion project designed to convert coal seam natural gas to liquefied natural gas for exports to the global market. The Curtis Island LNG project is fed by a 260-mile underground pipeline from the Bowen and Surat basins in Queensland.

Gallagher said the new business would move the company away from a geographically-based model to one more focused on the exploration and production side of the energy sector.

"We will manage our asset portfolio in a manner which delivers value to Santos shareholders," he said.

A controversial India-backed giant coal project near Australia's Great Barrier Reef was Sunday awarded mining leases, but developer Adani said it would not commit to a final investment decision until legal challenges against it were resolved.

The Queensland state government said the Aus$21.7 billion (US$16.7 billion) project to build one of the world's biggest mines was awarded three leases.

"This is a major step forward for this project after extensive government and community scrutiny," Queensland Premier Annastascia Palaszczuk said in a statement.

"Stringent conditions will continue to protect the environment, landholders' and traditional owners' interests, and our iconic Great Barrier Reef."

The state government added that the mining leases at Carmichael in the Galilee Basin were estimated to contain 11 billion tonnes of coal.

Adani welcomed the announcement, saying the leases gave the Indian conglomerate certainty and the firm had the "clear aim of commencing construction in calendar year 2017" pending the finalisation of some second-tier approvals.

But the company slammed legal challenges by conservationists, which along with the need for state and federal consent, has seen the approvals process stretched to some six years.

"(The) conclusion of second tier approvals and resolution of politically-motivated legal challenges is the company's principal focus, prior to a final investment decision being made," an Adani spokesman said in a statement.

"Having previously sought to progress to the construction phase in 2015, Adani is keenly aware of the risks of proceeding on major works in advance of the conclusion of these matters."

The awarding of the leases came two months after state authorities gave the project environmental approval subject to some 140 conditions.

Conservationists have argued the mega-mine would threaten the heritage-listed Great Barrier Reef, the world's biggest coral reef ecosystem.

Adani faces two legal challenges -- one from an indigenous group and another mounted by an environmental organisation.

The organisation, the Australian Conservation Foundation, slammed the decision and said its case in the Federal Court would be heard next month.

"By granting a licence for this massive coal mine the Palaszczuk government is bowing to the demands of big polluters, not listening to the needs of the people," the foundation's chief executive Kelly O'Shanassy said in a statement.

- 'Reef threatened' -

Researchers say the reef is currently experiencing the worst bleaching on record in its pristine north, with few corals escaping damage.

The biodiverse site is also threatened by climate change, which conservationists said causes the bleaching, as well as farming run-off, development and the coral-eating crown-of-thorns starfish.

A research paper published Saturday warned authorities' efforts to reduce the discharge of land-based pollutants into the reef were "unlikely to be sufficient to protect the GBR ecosystems from declining water quality within the aspired time frames".

Canberra in March last year unveiled the "Reef 2050" plan to save the major tourist attraction ahead of a United Nations decision in July that kept the reef off its endangered list.

The government was required to report back to the UN on its progress in implementing the plan by December 1 this year.

But the new paper's co-author, principal research scientist Frederieke Kroon of the government's Australian Institute of Marine Science, said water quality targets might be missed.

"Our review finds that current efforts are not sufficient to achieve the water quality targets set in the Reef 2050 plan," Kroon told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation Sunday.

"Land-based pollution including sediments, nutrients and pesticides from agricultural land uses remain one of the major threats to the Great Barrier Reef."

grk/ds

ADANI ENTERPRISES


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