Santos Shuts Down Barossa LNG Facility Amid Global Gas Crisis, Impacting Production Targets

March 24, 2026
Santos Shuts Down Barossa LNG Facility Amid Global Gas Crisis, Impacting Production Targets
  • Barossa’s history includes regulatory delays, legal challenges from Tiwi Island traditional owners, and multiple construction hurdles before a 2021 final investment decision, underscoring longstanding operational risk.

  • The project has faced reliability issues, including a 2025 software fault causing a two-week outage and ongoing commissioning problems with the BW Opal vessel, delaying practical completion earlier in March; only one LNG carrier has docked since the first, with another arrival canceled.

  • Santos has quietly shut down its Barossa LNG project’s Darwin LNG facility for several weeks amid a global gas crisis, a move that could affect customers awaiting supply and potentially push down near-term volumes if the outage persists.

  • Barossa is operated by Santos with a 50% stake, while SK E&S holds 37.5% and JERA 12.5% in the venture.

  • Market expectations are for a potential downgrade to Santos’s 2026 production forecast due to Barossa’s slow ramp-up and the latest setback, signaling ongoing production risk.

  • Santos’ 2026 quarterly outlook pegs total production around 101–111 mmboe, with Barossa contributing roughly 19 mmboe.

  • Earlier in the year, Darwin LNG exports had resumed after Barossa’s delayed start-up, which faced compressor seal problems.

  • Santos described the shutdown as planned, tied to commissioning activities, with no specific resumption timeline provided.

  • The export interruption comes amid a tightening LNG market amid broader global disruptions, including attacks on Gulf energy infrastructure and Qatar-related shipment issues affecting Europe and Asia.

  • The shutdown interrupts gas feeding the Darwin LNG plant, potentially affecting Santos’s full-year production targets of 101–111 million barrels of oil equivalent and narrowing the ramp-up at Barossa.

  • Asian utilities’ growing reliance on Australian LNG to offset reduced Middle East shipments has supported Santos and Woodside Energy with rising share prices amid the global energy crisis.

  • Analysts are watching for revisions to Santos’s guidance as supply tightens in the eastern Australian gas market ahead of winter.

Summary based on 3 sources


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Sources

Santos halts gas exports from Darwin amid global energy scramble


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