Western Australian gas explosion crisis to worsen: premier Perth (AFP) June 15, 2008 A crisis triggered by an explosion at a Western Australian gas plant will worsen this week, state Premier Alan Carpenter said Sunday as unions warned thousands could lose their jobs. The June 3 blast at the Apache Energy plant on Varanus Island cut off one-third of the state's gas supply and the company says it will be up to two months before supply is partially resumed. Carpenter said businesses may have to consider cost-cutting measures as they seek alternative, and more expensive, energy supplies. "Diesel-fired electricity is far more expensive than gas-fired electricity, so businesses will be making the decision as to whether the increased cost they are going to have to pay for energy warrants them shutting down for a while, or scaling down their production for a while, or standing down their staff for a while," he told reporters. The premier said the coming weeks would be the most difficult of the crisis, which has slowed some mining production, shut down several building material suppliers and created a shortage of clean linen for the hospitality industry after major laundries scaled back their workload. "I think the most difficult times are ahead of us. I think this week will be very difficult and I think the following week will be very difficult, and I mean very difficult," Carpenter said. "It's taken a while for the impact to wash through, but it's really coming upon us now, economically." Secretary of the Unions WA Dave Robinson said hundreds of workers at laundries, abattoirs, freight companies and in timber-related industries had already been stood down. He predicted that thousands more could be unemployed as the energy shortage continued. "There are a whole range of flow-on effects that we haven't even contemplated at this stage," he said. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Share This Article With Planet Earth
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The Iraqi Central And Kurdish Regional Governments Are Ready To Export Baghdad (UPI) Jun 16, 2008 Energy ministers from both Baghdad and the Kurdistan Regional Government said an agreement on exporting oil produced by Norway's DNO is possible, though official approval has not been finalized. Iraqi Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani said Iraq is preparing to sign contracts with five international consortiums to increase oil production by 500,000 barrels per day. Baghdad is in talks with the governments of Iran and Kuwait to develop shared oil fields, the Iraqi oil minister said. There would be relief to the global economic crisis with an increase of Iraqi oil entering the world market, the Indian foreign minister said. Jordanian Prime Minister Nader Dahabi said in Amman Friday the Iraqi government agreed to renew the terms of a 2006 deal to sell oil to the kingdom for a discounted price. |
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