- This event has passed.
2025 PESA WEBINAR SERIES: 2024 Development and Production Review (Martin Wilkes)

Kindly supported by Rock Flow dynamics 
This live webinar will take place at:
11am – Perth
12.30pm – Darwin, Adelaide
1pm – Brisbane, Canberra, Hobart, Melbourne, Sydney
Use the calendar link on this page to add this event in to your own calendar at the correct local time for your location.
Tickets are free for members (please log in to see this) and $10 for non members.
Please buy your tickets and immediately follow the link in the ticket e-mail (not the calendar invite or this webpage, which is just generic and not event specific) to set up your registration with the webinar software well in advance of the time of the talk. Once registered with the webinar software you will receive a reminder e-mail 1 hour beforehand.
2024 Development and Production Review
Presented by Martin Wilkes (RISC Managing Director)
Abstract
Geopolitical uncertainty continued in 2024 with continuation of the war in Ukraine, Israeli actions in the Gaza strip, tension between China and several neighbouring countries, and the impending election in the United States of America. Despite this, global inflationary pressures continued to fall during the year, although they remained higher than pre-pandemic levels. In Australia, activism around climate change issues continued to impact project developments and sentiment in the industry remained somewhat subdued. The PESA 2024 Development and Production Review looks back at the oil and gas development and production activities in Australia in 2024 and tries to provide some sense of what happened, and what that means for the industry looking forward. Liquefied natural gas (LNG) production in Australia recorded (unexpectedly) a new record high, although several projects are now facing declining production. Santos won a significant court case in January 2024 on the Barossa project, enabling it to resume construction activity on the main export pipeline to Darwin, which had been suspended for approximately 2 months. The east coast domestic market continued to have major concerns about gas supply and one of the three gas plants at Longford was shutdown reducing supply and processing capacity significantly. Gas supply remains a critical issue in the Northern Territory.


