Allocation of greenhouse gas emissions to products and joint-venture partners

2012 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 660
Author(s):  
Mathew Nelson

The oil and gas industry in Australia consists of a range of complicated joint venture (JV) and processing arrangements. With a future price on carbon in the Clean Energy Future Legislation Package, parties are keen to understand their carbon liabilities where they have interests (both operated and non-operated), and the extent to which a price on carbon can be passed on to customers. Many oil and gas companies have been reporting greenhouse gas emissions from their facilities to the Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency since 2009 using the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting System framework. Subsequently, numerous companies from the sector have developed greenhouse gas reporting systems linking into existing oil and gas production allocation systems. These companies are now turning their attention to using this information to allocate greenhouse gas emissions from their facilities to specific oil and gas sales products, as well as to JV partners. This extended abstract, which includes a case study, explores these developments and discusses the key considerations when allocating greenhouse gas emissions to specific products and JV partners. Also explored are the following questions: What assumptions need to be made at the facility level for emissions associated with extracting, processing and refining specific products ready for sale? How robust and defensible are these assumptions? How do you build these assumptions into a system or model that allocates emissions to different products? What processes do you then put in place to allocate emissions to specific JV partners, and what information will be reported to them and what quality and assurance processes need to be in place to provide comfort to your JV partners of the robustness of the numbers? How will the costs associated with carbon be allocated?

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Siveter ◽  
Karin Ritter ◽  
Michael Clowers ◽  
Arthur Lee ◽  
Jaime Martin Juez ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 493
Author(s):  
Joachim Bamberger ◽  
Ti-Chiun Chang ◽  
Brian Mason ◽  
Amer Mesanovic ◽  
Ulrich Münz ◽  
...  

As our energy systems evolve with the adoption of more variable renewable energy resources, so will our oil and gas industry play a pivotal role in what is expected to be a lengthy transitional phase to a greater mix of renewables with a reliance on fast, reliable gas peaking power generation, which have lower greenhouse gas emissions, and short delivery periods to construct. Oil and gas companies are also rapidly moving towards becoming integrated energy companies supplying a mix of gas, oil, photovoltaic power, wind power and hydrogen, coupling these into the electrical and gas grids. We discuss some of the components and tasks of a distributed energy system in its various system guises that contribute to a more cost effective, reliable and resilient energy system with lower greenhouse gas emissions. We discuss the role that hydrogen will play in the future as oil and gas companies explore alternatives to fossil fuels to address their need to reduce their carbon footprint, substituting or supplementing their conventional gas supply with renewably produced hydrogen. We talk about how Australia with its excellent renewable resources and the opportunity to potentially develop a new industry around the production of renewable fuels, power-to-X, such as hydrogen, with the potential for the oil and gas industry to leverage its existing assets (i.e. gas pipelines) and future embedded renewable assets to produce hydrogen through electrolysis with the intention of supplementing their liquefied natural gas exports with a portion of renewably produced hydrogen.


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