Greater Sunrise is a conventional gas development located in deepwater in Timor Sea Joint Petroleum Development Area and is operated by Woodside Petroleum (Timor Sea 19). According to GlobalData, who tracks more than 34,000 active and developing oil and gas fields worldwide, Greater Sunrise was discovered in 1974, lies in block JPDA 03-19, NT/RL 2, and NT/RL 4, with water depth of around 1,722 feet. Buy the profile here.

Smarter leaders trust GlobalData

The project is currently in feed stage and is expected to start commercial production in 2030. The development cost is expected to be $14,000 m. The Greater Sunrise conventional gas development will includes fixed platform.

Field participation details

The field is owned by Osaka Gas, Timor Gap EP and Woodside Energy Group.

Production from Greater Sunrise

Production from the Greater Sunrise conventional gas development project is expected to begin in 2030 and is forecast to peak in 2031, Based on economic assumptions, the production will continue until the field reaches its economic limit in 2064.

Contractors involved in the Greater Sunrise conventional gas field

Some of the key contractors involved in the Greater Sunrise project as follows.

Other Contractors: John Wood Group and Wood Group Mustang

For more details on the Greater Sunrise Conventional Gas Field, buy the profile here.

This content was updated on 7 February 2024

Premium Insights

From

The gold standard of business intelligence.

Blending expert knowledge with cutting-edge technology, GlobalData’s unrivalled proprietary data will enable you to decode what’s happening in your market. You can make better informed decisions and gain a future-proof advantage over your competitors.

GlobalData

GlobalData, the leading provider of industry intelligence, provided the underlying research used to produce this article.

This information is drawn from GlobalData’s Oil & Gas Intelligence Center, which provides detailed profiles of 34,000+ oil and gas fields, 400,000+ exploration blocks, 1,100+ LNG terminals, 3,400+ gas processing plants, 5,000+ storage terminals, and 8,000+ pipelines, 1,400+ refineries and 13,000+ petrochemical plants worldwide.