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Events
November 2008

November 24-25

Muscat, OMN
Phone:: 713 292 1945
Fax:: 713 292 1946
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Website

November 25-26
Cernobbio, Lake Como, ITA
Phone:: +44 (0) 1737 855281
Fax:: +44 (0) 1737 855482
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Website

November 27
Offshore Energy 2008
Rijkswerf Willemsoord, Den Helder, The Netherlands The Netherlands
Phone:: 010 43 60 112
Fax:: 010 43 68 134
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Website

December 2-5
Suntec, SING
Phone:: +44 (0)20 7840 2100
Fax:: +44 (0)20 7840 2111
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Website

December 2-4
Prague, CZE
Phone:: +44 207 067 1800
Fax:: +44 207 430 0552
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December 3-5
Perth Australia
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December 3-4
Galveston, TX USA
Phone:: 713 292 1945
Fax:: 713 292 1946
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December 3-5
Kuala Lumpur, MAL
Phone:: +971 (0)4 390 3540
Fax:: +971 (0)4 366 4648
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December 3-4
Singapore, SING
Phone:: +44 (0) 207 067 1800
Fax:: +44 (0) 207 430 0552
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Website

December 3-5
New Orleans, La. US
Phone:: 216 464 2785
Fax:: 216 464 2768
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December 8-9
New York, NY USA
Phone:: 212 686 6808
Fax:: 212 686 6628
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Indonesia, Inpex hold talks on LNG terminal construction

Oil & Gas Journal

Eric Watkins
Oil Diplomacy Editor

LOS ANGELES, Sept. 4 -- Indonesia is conducting talks with Inpex Holdings Inc. aimed at having the Japanese firm construct the world's first offshore LNG terminal as part of its development of the Masela offshore gas field in the Timor Sea near the maritime border with Australia.

Indonesian officials, who are making construction of the terminal a condition for the development project, said development could begin as early as November, assuming that a final agreement is reached.

Discussion are said to be complicated by the fact that Indonesia, Japan's main supplier of LNG, is taking a hard line.

Inpex, which holds a 100% stake in the block, had hoped to lay a pipeline from the field to the northern coast of Australia and then use an LNG terminal there to export the gas.

However, Indonesia's Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources instead proposed construction of the offshore terminal due to what it claims are the difficulties involved in laying pipe through a deep trench.

The proposed offshore LNG terminal would produce some 4-5 million tonnes a year and would begin operations in 2015 or later, according to the ministry. It added that the cost of building the proposed offshore terminal would reach $14 billion—about twice as much as a landside terminal in Australia.

The Japanese firm, which believes construction of an offshore terminal would be both difficult and costly, said negotiations are underway and that that nothing final has been decided.

Contact Eric Watkins at hippalus@yahoo.com.

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