Spiecapag begins construction of the Jemena commissioned Atlas Gas pipeline in Queensland

By Daniel Brightmore
Share
Spiecapag has commenced work on 60km, 8-inch steel-coated, buried gas pipeline and compressor station, located approximately 20km south-west of Wandoan...

Spiecapag has commenced work on 60km, 8-inch steel-coated, buried gas pipeline and compressor station, located approximately 20km south-west of Wandoan in Queensland, Australia. The Atlas Gas pipeline, commissioned by Jemena, will connect gas from Senex Energy’s Atlas gas field to the east-coast gas market via the Wallumbilla Gas Hub.

The Atlas acreage is Queensland’s first domestic-only gas supply with all gas ear-marked for the domestic market.

Jemena’s Executive General Manager of Gas Markets, Antoon Boey, said construction and commissioning of the Atlas project is expected to be complete before the end of 2019:

“We are currently in the early stages of construction, with around 90 people on site conducting clear and grade and stringing activities, and we expect this work to ramp up quickly over the coming weeks.

“The Atlas pipeline and processing facility have been designed to enable further expansion once additional gas reserves become available from the Atlas production area.”

Jemena recently awarded Spiecapag Australia a $20 million contract to construct the Atlas Gas Pipeline, while Australian energy and infrastructure services group, Valmec, has been appointed to construct the Atlas Compressor Station. In total, Jemena will invest around $140 million to construct the Atlas Gas Pipeline Project which is expected to create around 150 to 200 jobs in Queensland.

SEE ALSO:

EPA approves natural gas pipeline in Pilbara, Western Australia

Macro and Vinci’s Spiecapag to build section of 670km Canadian gas pipeline in $677mn contract

SNC-Lavalin secures five years of Middle East oil and gas construction work

Read the latest issue of Construction Global here

“We are acutely aware that Australia faces a gas supply crisis and Jemena is investing heavily in new gas transmission infrastructure to bring new gas supplies into the market. Moving gas from where it is produced to the markets where it is needed at the lowest possible cost and doing so safely and reliably is of utmost importance to Jemena,” added Boey.

“As we transition to a low-carbon future gas will play an increasingly important role in complementing intermittent renewable technologies such as wind and solar generation that, currently, are unable to provide firming power. It will also continue to play an essential role for industries which rely on gas as a primary input into their production processes.”  

Jemena is an $11bn company that owns and manages some of Australia's most significant gas and electricity assets, including the Jemena Gas Network servicing 1.3 million customers around NSW and the Eastern Gas Pipeline which delivers gas from Victoria's Gippsland basin to the ACT, Sydney and regional NSW.

Share

Featured Articles

Iconic Building Project: Bilbao Island Smart City District

Iberdrola & Bilbao City Council are transforming an old industrial area into a net zero emissions smart city testing ground for renewable energy solutions

How AI is Shaping Architecture, Construction & Engineering

Neil Davidson, Group VP of Deltek -- an architecture, construction and engineering specialist -- on the impact on AI and how the industry can be smarter

Aggreko: Power Supply Issues Hitting Offshore Wind Builds

Construction firms face challenges as McKinsey forecasts 630GW installed capacity by 2050, but Aggreko study reveals power supply chain gaps hinder develop

Electric Construction Machinery Growth 'is Significant'

Sustainability & Green Building

NEC and Consult Australia Forge Contract Partnership

Construction Projects

Real Estate Giant Cushman & Wakefield Details Net Zero Path

Sustainability & Green Building