Shell game: How Australian gas giants are using Singapore to reduce taxes
Key takeaways
- The ship is docked at Curtis Island, a major gas export terminal.
- In this way, fossil fuel companies send much of Australia's vast reserves of natural gas overseas.
- But then, somewhere along the journey, a seemingly inexplicable thing happens.
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
Link copied Share Share article An LNG cargo tanker moored at Curtis Island.(Supplied: Nearmaps)On a muddy waterway near Gladstone, about 500 kilometres north of Brisbane, tanker ships like this one are a common sight. Each holds enough liquefied natural gas (LNG) to power a city the size of Melbourne for a week.
The ship is docked at Curtis Island, a major gas export terminal. Inside this marvel of engineering, millions of cubic feet of gas every day are chilled and condensed to a liquid form about one-600th of its original size. From here, the ship sails north to markets in Asia.
In this way, fossil fuel companies send much of Australia's vast reserves of natural gas overseas.