The Amadeus Gas Pipeline is a bi-directional natural gas pipeline running north–south through the Northern Territory of Australia. Its southern extent is the Amadeus Basin gas fields west of Alice Springs. The Amadeus pipeline is owned and operated by APA Group, and regulated by the Australian Energy Regulator.[1]

Amadeus Gas Pipeline
The Amadeus Pipeline (orange) and other main gas pipelines in the Northern Territory
The Amadeus Pipeline (orange) and other main gas pipelines in the Northern Territory
Location
CountryAustralia
StateNorthern Territory
General directionNorth–south
FromAmadeus Basin
Passes throughTennant Creek, Katherine
ToDarwin
General information
Typenatural gas
StatusOperational
OwnerAPA Group
OperatorAPA Group
Construction started1987
Technical information
Length1,512 km (940 mi)
No. of compressor stations1 (and 4 injection points)
Websitewww.apa.com.au/our-services/gas-transmission/central-region-pipelines/amadeus-gas-pipeline/

The Amadeus Gas Pipeline was originally built to transport gas north from the Palm Valley and Mereenie gas fields in the Amadeus Basin to fuel electricity generation in Katherine and Darwin. Since 2008, it has also carried gas sourced from the Blacktip gas field in the Bonaparte Basin which is delivered 287 kilometres (178 mi) from Wadeye by the Bonaparte Gas Pipeline to the Amadeus pipeline[2] at Ban Ban Springs near Burrundie.[3]

The Northern Gas Pipeline was constructed in 2017–2018 and connects the Amadeus Pipeline near Tennant Creek to the gas pipe infrastructure in the eastern states of Australia.[4]

The Amadeus Pipeline system has four inlet stations where gas is received into the pipeline. These are at Palm Valley Gas Field, Mereenie Oil Field, Ban Ban Springs (where gas is received from the Bonaparte Gas Pipeline) and Wickham (where gas is received from the Darwin LNG processing facility that receives raw gas by undersea pipeline from the Bayu-Undan field in the northern Bonaparte Basin). It also has an additional compressor station at Warrego and an odorant station at Tylers Pass. There are eleven mainline valves and scraper stations, and fourteen offtakes from the line. Total length including spurs and laterals is 1,629 kilometres (1,012 mi).[5]: page 5 

The fourteen offtake delivery points are:[5]: table 1.1, page 17 

Only the lateral lines at Katherine, Tennant Creek and Channel Island are considered part of the Amadeus Pipeline system.

References

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  1. ^ "Amadeus Gas Pipeline". APA Group. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  2. ^ "NT: Amadeus Gas Pipeline". Australian Energy Market Commission. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  3. ^ "Bonaparte Gas Pipeline". APA Group. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  4. ^ Beavan, Katrina (14 December 2018). "Northern Territory on cusp of becoming gas centre of Australia as gas pipeline opens". ABC News. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  5. ^ a b APA Group (August 2015). "Amadeus Gas Pipeline Access Arrangement Revision Proposal" (PDF). Retrieved 22 December 2018 – via Australian Energy Regulator.