National Post

‘ THE TIDE HAS TURNED’: B.C. LNG PROJECTS STRANDED AMID GLOBAL GLUT: STUDY.

B.C. plants on back burner as investors pause

- Jesse Snyder Financial Post jsnyder@postmedia.com

CALGARY• A new report suggests LNG prices will remain low well beyond 2020, further eroding Canada’s ambitions to become a prominent exporter of the supercoole­d gas in coming years.

Analysts at Moody’s Investor Service said t hat global LNG markets are likely to remain oversuppli­ed well into the next decade as Asian demand for the gas weakens and new supplies begin entering the market.

The estimate runs counter to some other analyst projection­s, which expect markets to balance in the next few years to create a so- called “second wave” of opportunit­y for would-be LNG exporters in Canada.

The internatio­nal LNG market has grown rapidly over the past few years as rising demand for the gas, particular­ly in Asian countries, kicked off a global race to meet future supply needs.

Canada was among the countries vying to enter the market, and around 20 LNG export facilities were proposed for the B.C. coast, which would be fed by sizable natural gas fields in northern B.C. and Alberta.

In recent years substantia­l volumes of new supply started entering the market from facilities in Australia, the U.S. and elsewhere, satisfying demand for the gas.

Mi hoko Man abe, a Moody’s analyst who contribute­d to the report, said Canada’s missed opportunit­y to enter the LNG market is partly a result of oversupply. But she added that the shortcomin­g is also a result of political fumbles and local environmen­tal opposition to the projects at a time when companies were more open to make major investment­s in Western Canadian LNG.

“In the last few years, I think the tide has turned against them — and a lot of it is beyond the cyclical ups and downs of commodity prices,” Manabe said.

Around 34 million tonnes per annum of LNG came online in 2016, the report said, with an additional 105 mtpa expected to be added over the next three years — roughly a quarter of the expected total LNG market in 2020.

The Moody’s a nalyst doubts demand for largescale LNG f acilities will return to f ormer l evels, even after markets eventually rebalance. Investors are more likely to flock toward smaller, more incrementa­l developmen­ts at facilities that have already signed contracts with buyers. “It’s a lot more economic to expand an existing plant,” she said.

Another t hreat is t he growth of Floating Storage Gasificati­on Units ( FSGUs), which offer much cheaper and more versatile supplies of LNG that can reach yet-untapped markets.

“That has allowed the market to diversify i nto areas, like the Middle East for example,” she said.

The report comes as Premier Christy Clark’s B. C. Liberal Party heads into a provincial election in May, after promising to develop Canada’s LNG industry during the last election cycle.

A decision by the federal government last September to approve the $ 11.4- billion Pacific North-West LNG project, proposed by a consortium led by Malaysia- based Petronas, was used by the party as evidence that it was gradually realizing those ambitions.

However many analysts say the consortium is likely to delay a final investment decision until market indication­s improve.

Analysts say the changing structure of global LNG markets will tighten competitio­n along B.C.’s coast to build the first export facility.

“The projects that go forward will be the best of the best,” said Jihad Traya, an analyst with Solomon Associates in Calgary.

“Of all the 20- plus projects that were proposed, they were all, on their own, world- class. But within that pool their will still be significan­t attrition,” he said.

LNG markets often take years for demand and supply to balance out, according to Traya. However the falling costs of renewable energy sources like wind and solar will also pose a challenge to would- be exporters of LNG when markets near a more-balanced state.

“The difference is that they now have to compete against renewables in ways that weren’t necessaril­y conceived or understood before.”

The global LNG market is expected to grow over the next few years despite increased competitio­n. Solomon Associates expects the global liquefacti­on capacity could reach 85 billion cubic feet per day in 2025, up from 41 bcfd in 2016.

I THINK THE TIDE HAS TURNED AGAINST THEM.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada