- Maui gas field
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The Maui natural gas field is the largest gas, natural gas condensate and oil field in New Zealand, producing nearly three-quarters of the country's hydrocarbons, as well as providing energy for electricity generation. It is located in the Tasman Sea, 35 km off the coast of Taranaki and to the southwest of New Plymouth. It covers an area of 157 square kilometres and is located in 110 metres of water.[1]
The gas field was discovered in 1969 by a joint venture of Royal Dutch/Shell, British Petroleum and Todd Petroleum. It was considered a "giant" field at the time of discovery. Government investment led to a government organisation later called Petrocorp taking a 50% interest. This was later bought out by Fletcher Challenge Energy. By the end of the Maui gas contract in 2009, the Maui Mining Companies were made up of Shell (84%), OMV New Zealand (10%), and Todd Energy (6%).[1]
Two platforms operate in the field: full production from Maui A began in 1979; Maui B was installed 13 years later. Much of the gas from Maui was used to supply the Motunui synthetic petrol plant from 1986 until it ceased operation in 2004. An onshore naphtha refining plant was installed in 1999. The floating production storage and offloading vessel Whakaaropai was installed as part of the final development phases in 1996, for the production of oil from Maui B. It was sold in 2005 when the recoverable oil reserves had been exhausted.
Gas is piped to power stations for electricity generation in Taranaki, Huntly and Auckland. Electricity production from the gas grew steadily from the 1970s, with it providing 30% of New Zealand's electricity in 2002. Production declined in the 2000s as the gas was depleted, providing just 16% of the country's electricity in 2005. The gas is also distributed through high-pressure pipelines for industrial and domestic use around the North Island. This used 30% of the gas produced in 2005.[2]
The reserves of the Maui field are dwindling, but there is hope that another, currently undeveloped field nearby (the Kupe field) will provide economically viable reserves of gas. The Pohokura gas field came on-stream in 2006, replacing some of the declining Maui production.
See also
References
- ^ a b "Landmark Maui contract ends after 30 years". 23 June 2009. http://www.voxy.co.nz/national/landmark-maui-contract-ends-after-30-years/5/16801. Retrieved 2009-06-23.
- ^ Gregg, Roger; Walrond, Carl (2 March 2009). "Oil and gas – The Māui gas field". Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/oil-and-gas/5. Retrieved 29 October 2011.
External links
Categories:- Taranaki Region
- New Zealand seafloor (oceanography)
- Oil fields of New Zealand
- Natural gas fields in New Zealand
- Buildings and structures in the Taranaki Region
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