BP (LON:BP) has restarted its second liquefied natural gas (LNG) export train at the Tangguh complex in Indonesia following a shutdown due to mechanical irregularities. The Tangguh Train 2 plant has a processing capacity of 3.8 million tonnes per year of LNG.
Tangguh LNG shut down its Train 2 operations due to detected irregularities in the gas heater on 19 April. Production restarted Thursday morning, a spokesperson for BP told Energy Voice.
Last year, Tangguh LNG Train 2 facilities were shut down temporarily after a leakage was detected in the scrub column reboiler in early May 2021.
Indonesian upstream regulator SKK Migas said late last year that it expects operations at BP’s Tangguh liquefied natural gas (LNG) Train 3 project, which is under construction, to start in Q2 2022.