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Home Gas

ACCC allows joint market arrangements for Mereenie gas field owners

by Lauren DeLorenzo
January 31, 2022
in Gas, News, Policy, Retail, Spotlight
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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The four owners of the Northern Territory Mereenie gas field will now be able to make joint market arrangements, following a decision from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC).

Central Petroleum, Macquarie Mereenie, New Zealand Oil and Gas, and Cue Energy are currently the joint venture partners in the field.

The basin is located in the Amadeus Basin, approximately 250km west of Alice Springs.

ACCC authorisation of the arrangements permits joint venture participants to jointly market gas from the Mereenie field until February 2027. Within this period, they can enter into gas supply agreements with customers on common terms and conditions that could operate up to February 2032.

Joint marketing will apply only to the sale of gas produced at the Mereenie field, not to gas produced from other fields owned or operated by participants in the Mereenie joint venture.

ACCC Commissioner Stephen Ridgeway said, “Australia’s competition laws generally require businesses to act independently when deciding who to sell to, but the ACCC may grant an authorisation if it’s satisfied that the likely public benefit outweighs any likely public harm.

“In the case of Mereenie gas, joint marketing arrangements will likely reduce transaction costs and encourage investment to increase gas production, which will facilitate gas being brought to market sooner.

“Separate marketing of gas is generally preferable as it results in more competitive outcomes; however, the volume of gas produced at this field is relatively small, and demand in the NT-Mount Isa gas market is mostly met by a small number of large contracts. 

“For these reasons, separate marketing is unlikely to result in significant competition benefits.”

Mr Ridgeway also said that gas users in the NT-Mount Isa region have the option of alternative supply from sources such as the Power and Water Corporation in the NT’s Blacktip Field, the Cooper Basin, and potentially the Galilee Basin.

“The presence of alternative suppliers limits the risk of the Mereenie joint venture offering its gas at higher prices, or on less flexible terms,” Mr Ridgeway said.

The ACCC issued a draft determination on 19 November 2021 and interim authorisation on 7 October 2021.

The determination is available on the ACCC public register at Macquarie Mereenie & Ors.

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