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Australia LNG disruptions continue after Narelle, thousands without power

By Thomson Reuters Mar 28, 2026 | 7:51 PM

SYDNEY, March 29 (Reuters) – Australia’s liquefied natural gas production remained disrupted and thousands were without power in the remote northwest on Sunday, more than a week after the ​Narelle storm system hit the country.

The impact of ‌Narelle, downgraded from a tropical cyclone on Saturday, on LNG plants run by Chevron and Woodside has exacerbated a global supply crunch caused by the month-old Iran war.

Australia became the world’s second-largest LNG exporter when Qatar halted ‌production ​following damage from Iranian strikes.

Woodside Australia said ⁠on Sunday there was ⁠no update to the situation. Narelle was still interrupting production on Saturday at the company’s Karratha gas plant, the onshore processing facility for the North West Shelf project, while production ​was unaffected at its Macedon and Pluto facilities.

Chevron did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Sunday. ⁠On Saturday, it said it was working ⁠to restore production at its Gorgon and Wheatstone ​gas facilities following production outages due to Narelle.

Gorgon is Australia’s largest ​LNG export facility, producing 15.6 million metric tons a ‌year with three processing trains, while Wheatstone has two trains producing 8.9 million tons.

Power remained cut late on Saturday in Exmouth, a town of 2,800 people some 1,100 km (700 miles) north ⁠of West Australia’s state capital Perth, the Department of Fire and Emergency Services said.

State-owned Horizon Power said extra crews were on their way ⁠to Exmouth “to support ‌local crews to restore power to affected properties ⁠as soon as it is safe to do ​so”.

Exmouth, ‌a gateway to the UNESCO World Heritage-listed Ningaloo ​Reef, suffered ⁠significant damage in the cyclone but no one was injured, the Australian Broadcasting Corp reported.

Narelle made landfall as a severe tropical cyclone in Queensland state on March 20 and crossed the Northern Territory before hitting Western Australia.

(Reporting by Sam McKeith in Sydney; Editing ​by William Mallard)