
Shell has launched a divestment process for its 16.67% stake in the North West Shelf joint venture.
Codenamed "Project Adenium," the sale of the stake—valued at approximately US$3 billion—signals a fundamental misalignment between the supermajor's global strategy and the project’s transition into a third-party tolling model.
The NWS, Australia's oldest and largest LNG complex, is pivoting toward processing gas for external users to extend the life of the Karratha Gas Plant through 2070.
However, analysts suggest Shell has little appetite for remaining a passive participant in an aging infrastructure asset where returns are increasingly diluted by rising maintenance and decommissioning costs.
The strategic retreat follows Shell’s recent exit from the Browse Basin development, where structural conflicts arose over paying third-party fees to process gas through facilities Shell no longer wishes to anchor.
While Woodside Energy (ASX:WDS) recently moved to consolidate its own position to 50% via a swap with Chevron, Shell’s departure leaves a vacuum for new capital.
Potential suitors are rumoured to include Asian LNG buyers and infrastructure investors, though any buyer must stomach the heavy "life-extension" costs of a 40-year-old plant.
For Shell, the move completes a long withdrawal that began with its failed 2001 takeover bid for Woodside, finally severing ties with an asset that once contributed 1% of Australia’s GDP.