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Woodside sees $1.2 billion US LNG play paying off as Trump policies drive deals

LNG 2023 energy trade show in Vancouver
February 24, 2025
Christine Chen, Sameer Manekar - Reuters

By Christine Chen and Sameer Manekar

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Woodside Energy, Australia's top gas producer, is well positioned to capitalise on demand for U.S. liquefied natural gas driven by President Donald Trumpโ€™s trade policy and pro-fossil fuel agenda, CEO Meg Oโ€™Neill told Reuters on Tuesday.

She said the Trump administrationโ€™s efforts to reduce the trade deficit by pressuring allies to buy more U.S. goods was already generating potential business for Woodsideโ€™s Louisiana LNG project, which it acquired for $1.2 billion last year.

โ€œMany of the customers we talked to or tendered to are progressing LNG procurement deals with us because they want to be able to then say, 'We've adjusted our balance of trade',โ€ she said in an interview after the company released its annual results.

โ€œIf you're a foreign nation and you're asking what are the sorts of things I can buy from the U.S. to adjust balance of trade, energy - LNG in particular - is low hanging fruit.โ€

Woodside bought Tellurian to develop the 27.6 million metric tons a year Louisiana LNG project, formerly called Driftwood, and reaffirmed on Tuesday it expected to be ready to make a final investment decision from the first quarter of 2025.

Concerns about Woodside's U.S. acquisitions, including a major ammonia project, have weighed on its shares, which have sharply underperformed peers over the past year. But the stock rose 2.8% on Tuesday on the company's better-than-expected earnings and dividend.

Woodside reported a 13% drop in annual underlying profit to $2.88 billion on weaker oil and gas prices, slightly ahead of the Visible Alpha consensus of $2.83 billion.

It declared a final dividend of 53 cents per share, beating a consensus of 51 cents.

Oโ€™Neill told investors on an earnings call that Louisiana LNG had a โ€œcompetitive advantageโ€ over other U.S. exporters on cost, commercial and schedule grounds and that the project could command a price premium.

โ€œWe're at least a year ahead of everybody else in the U.S., and we continue to attract a premium from many players who are interested or seriously interested in U.S. LNG,โ€ she said.

The Tellurian deal was initially poorly received by investors, but now โ€œWoodsideโ€™s giving signals that give the market more confidence,โ€ said MST Marquee senior energy analyst Saul Kavonic.

โ€œThe marketing and sell down process for Louisiana LNG is advancing well. A final investment decision is all but inevitable,โ€ he said.

Reuters earlier this month reported Woodside had held talks with several potential buyers including Tokyo Gas, Japan's JERA and Saudi Aramco-backed MidOcean Energy to sell as much as half its stake in the project.

Oโ€™Neill said Trumpโ€™s promotion of oil and gas was a โ€œvery clear proโ€ for Woodside, as the company faces โ€œred and green tapeโ€ for projects in Australia.

She dismissed concerns about potential competition from a proposed Alaska LNG project to supply North Asia.

โ€œItโ€™s very expensive to develop and will take a very long time,โ€ she said. โ€œI'm not particularly concerned about developments that will come online in a decade's time.โ€

($1 = 1.5746 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Christine Chen in Sydney and Sameer Manekar in Bengaluru; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta, Stephen Coates and Sonali Paul)

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