Beetaloo Energy has delivered another confidence-boosting result from its flagship Beetaloo Basin gas play, with its Carpentaria-5H well clocking up one of the strongest flow performances ever seen in the basin.
While still in a 30-day clean-up period, the well has already posted standout gas rates, reinforcing the companyโs strategy of prioritising long-term productivity as it prepares for pilot gas sales in 2026.
Beetaloo Energy preparing for flow testing at the companyโs Carpentaria 5-H gas well in the Northern Territory.
Carpentaria-5H reached a peak gas rate of 11.2 terajoules (TJ) per day and averaged a basin-leading 7.1 TJ/day across the test period. The well finished the test flowing at 6.3 TJ/day, a result that management says highlights an impressively low decline rate at this early stage.
Notably, the numbers were achieved while the well was still dewatering, with only about 23 per cent of the fracture stimulation fluid recovered so far, suggesting the best is still yet to come. Both Carpentaria-2H and Carpentaria-3H, two of Beetalooโs previous wells, recorded material uplifts in gas flows once clean-up was complete, with post-clean-up flow rates jumping by up to 30 per cent.
Instead of chasing big early flow numbers, Beetaloo has taken a more careful approach to protect the well and improve long-term output. By using a restricted choke from the second day of testing, the company slowed the clean-up process better preserved the fractures than in earlier wells.
The company says early technical studies suggest this strategy is working. Specialists believe Carpentaria-5H has developed a stronger and larger fracture network, with fractures extending further into the rock and gas flowing more easily through the shale. Together, these improvements could lift total gas recovery and improve the projectโs overall economics.
Backing that up, independent resource certifier Netherland, Sewell & Associates has attributed 10 petajoules of recoverable 2C gas resources per well location in the area surrounding Carpentaria-5H, reinforcing the scale potential of Beetalooโs core acreage.
While the flow test headlines have grabbed attention, progress on the ground is also gathering pace. Beetaloo has now secured all regulatory and board approvals required to move ahead with its Carpentaria Pilot project and commence gas sales into the local market under a 10-year agreement with the Northern Territory Government.
Civil works at the Carpentaria gas plant site are ongoing, with preparations underway for pile installation and mechanical equipment in the first half of 2026. At the same time, the refurbishment of gas compression equipment in Queensland is nearing completion ahead of relocation and commissioning on site later next year.