PetroSA's GTL plant to close if no new gas discoveries are made
PetroSA is receiving resistance from residents' associations and environmental groups who warn that the Vleesbaai
project, an unspoilt coastal area west of Mossel Bay, will cause property prices to drop, destroy the growing tourism
industry, disrupt commercial fishing activity, and pose serious risks to the environment. Natural gas is highly
flammable and requires strict safety measures.
According to PetroSA, the group urgently needs to find new gas supplies for its gas-to-liquid (GTL) plant because the
gas fields being exploited via the FA platform on the southern Cape coast will by next year become too small for
viable exploitation.
Mareo Bekker, chairperson of the Rescue Vleesbaai Action Group (REVAG) reckons plans for a floating LNG discharge
point form only the thin edge of the wedge. These could in time lead to a permanent LNG quay, and Vleesbaai would
eventually become a industrial petrochemical area.
REVAG represents homeowner and taxpayer associations, as well as property developers and the Pinnacle Point golf
estate.
Action groups suggest PetroSA should build the LNG offloading point in Voorbaai, in the Mossel Bay industrial area,
where PetroSA already has a crude oil discharge point and a pipeline to the GTL plant.
But if the GTL plant has to close because the LNG discharge point cannot be built, 1 800 workers could lose their
jobs and the state would forfeit income like the R 428 mm in tax that PetroSA paid in the past fiscal year, the group
points out.
