Santos grill rezepte
On this Wikipedia the language links are at the top of the page across from the article santos grill rezepte. Australian oil and gas exploration and production company, with its headquarters in Adelaide, South Australia.
The company has been criticised by environmentalists and others for its high level of greenhouse gas emissions, its lobbying of political parties, and various incidents causing contamination. Santos provides sponsorship of several arts festivals and bodies, charities, and the University of Adelaide’s Australian School of Petroleum. Santos was incorporated on 18 March 1954, with its name an acronym of South Australia Northern Territory Oil Search. Its core business was initially built on gas discoveries in the Cooper Basin, South Australia, with the discovery and development of the Gidgealpa 2 well in 1963 and Moomba 1 in 1966.
After oil was discovered at Tirrawarra, near Moomba, South Australia, in the early 1970s, the company developed its liquid supply operations, which included a plant at Moomba and a fractionation and loading facility at Port Bonython. In the 1990s, the company expanded, acquiring other companies and developing its operations both onshore and offshore in Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam and Papua New Guinea. In 2015 Santos began producing LNG, shipping it to South Korea. Santos is one of Australia’s domestic gas and oil producers, supplying sales gas to all mainland Australian states and territories, ethane to Sydney, and oil and liquids to domestic and international customers. Santos has its headquarters at 60 Flinders Street, Adelaide.
It also has offices in Brisbane, Sydney, Perth and Jakarta. Since 1 February 2016 and as of June 2022 the company’s CEO has been Kevin Gallagher. The South Australian and Queensland gas reserves are the main sources of natural gas to the eastern states of Australia. Santos has made significant discoveries in the Browse Basin, off the northwest of Western Australia.
On 7 September 2017 Santos pledged to divert 30 petajoules of gas from the Gladstone LNG plant slated for export into Australia’s east coast market in 2018 and 2019, as part of efforts to avert government-imposed restrictions on gas exports to solve local gas shortages. Santos has an interest in the Darwin LNG project, which was the first liquefied natural gas project in the Northern Territory and the second in Australia. The Barossa project is a proposed gas field in the Timor Sea, intended to take over from Bayu-Undan field after its reserves are exhausted, supplying LNG to the Darwin facility via a new pipeline which, for part of its length, run parallel to the existing Bayu-Undan to Darwin Pipeline. 2021, with gas production is expected to commence in 2025. The project is expected to create about 600 jobs during construction and 350 ongoing jobs in Darwin over the following 20 years. The project has been criticised for its future carbon emissions. If developed, Barossa would become the most carbon-intensive gas development in Australia.
They hoped to prevent Santos from building the gas pipeline near Cape Fourcroy, a habitat for many marine species, and a place where many Aboriginal people hunt, live, and camp. However the case failed in the Seoul District Court. In June 2022 traditional owners of the Tiwi Islands filed a lawsuit against Santos and the federal government, who they said had not properly consulted them. Santos’ production for 2008 was 54. In 2015, Santos’ financial troubles became more evident as the share price crashed to one third of its value from the previous year. It hit a 12-year low and has stayed low since.
This occurred because of mounting debt and an oil price slump. CEO David Knox was forced to leave, with chairman Peter Coates stepping into the role and leading a strategic review of the gas company. In 2020, Santos was named on a list of Australia’s 65 worst greenhouse gas emitting companies. Santos has engaged Adelaide-based consultancy Bespoke Approach to lobby the Australian Government and the state governments of New South Wales and Queensland. 13, Santos Ltd gave donations directly to the Labor, Liberal, and National political parties at state and federal levels.
On 1 January 2004 an explosion occurred at Santos’ Moomba processing facility. Mercury was released along with a cloud of flammable gases including methane, ethane, propane and butane. Workers saw the cloud and raised the alarm, shutting down the plant and evacuating to designated safety points. Moomba workers who sought to remain anonymous told The Australian newspaper on 5 January that the company was running a “cowboy” operation, and that it was luck, not management that had prevented any loss of life.
They also said that the emergency muster area was too close to the plant in the event of a major tank explosion. Gas supplies to South Australia and New South Wales were interrupted, leading to down-time in the manufacturing sector and short-term rationing measures in both states while repairs were made. 40 million on remedial action following the incident. In 2011, the South Australian industrial relations court ruled that 13 employees had been placed at risk due to critical safety shortcomings. In May 2006, the Sidoarjo mud flow disaster occurred in East Java, Indonesia. Controversy exists surrounding the probable cause of the disaster which has displaced approximately 10,000 people and covered villages, farms and industrial areas with mud. The eruption is ongoing, though since 2011 the rate of flow has reduced.