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| Tackling Poverty |
IT is tempting to wonder how much
of an appetite Barack Obama will
have for dinner on Thursday
evening (17May). That afternoon,
ahead of the two-day meeting of
the G8 at Camp David, which kicks off
on Friday, he will announce what is currently
being called "the new alliance to
increase food security and nutrition"... |
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| A MARKET
SOCIETY |
PORING through Harvard
philosopher Michael
Sandel's new book, What
Money Can't Buy: The
Moral Limits of
Markets, I found myself over
and over again turning pages
and saying, "I had no idea."
I had no idea that in the year
2000, as Sandel notes, "a
Russian ... |
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Chevron signs LNG deal with Tohoku Electric
REUTERS
ADELAIDE
CHEVRON has signed a preliminary agreement to sell Japan’s Tohoku Electric one million tonnes of liquefied natural gas per year for 20 years, the US oil major said on Sunday.
The gas will come from its Wheatstone plant in Australia, Roy Krzywosinski, Chevron Austalia’s managing director told reporters in Adelaide, adding that with this sale more than 80 percent of the gas from the 8.9 million tonnes per year (mtpa) Wheatstone project had been sold to Asian customers.
Wheatstone, located off the coast of Western Australia, is currently under construction, with the first gas shipments expected in 2016.
Chevron plans to eventually expand the production of the $29 billion Wheatstone LNG plant to 25 mtpa.
Chevron is positioning itself to become one of the largest LNG producers in Australia. Its $37 billion Gorgon project, also off Western Australia, will produce 15 mtpa by 2014.
The construction of Gorgon is now 40 percent complete, and Chevron expects to start the front end engineering and design phase for a fourth train on its current threetrain project at the end of this year, Krzywosinski said.
The LNG deal comes as Japan’s dependence on gas- fired power increases as it struggles to replace the nuclear capacity that has been taken offline since last year’s earthquake and tsunami triggered the Fukushima nuclear crisis.
Tohoku is one of several Asian utilities to buy supplies from Wheatstone, including Chubu Electric Power, Tokyo Electric Power Company and Kyushu Electric.
Chevron’s partners in the Wheatstone project are Apache Corporation, Kuwait Foreign Petroleum Exploration Company and Royal Dutch Shell.
Australia is expected to surpass Qatar as the top LNG exporter by the end of the decade, when it would have quadrupled its current production of about 20 mtpa.
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