Saskatoon StarPhoenix

‘Double-whammy’ could hit LNG with oil price rout

More than a dozen proposed projects at risk of being delayed or scrapped

- STEPHEN STAPCZYNSK­I and NAUREEN S. MALIK

Oil’s rout may have been an unexpected boon for the biggest buyers of liquefied natural gas, but its knock-on effects may come back to bite them.

That’s because more than a dozen proposed LNG export projects from the U.S. to Mozambique are at risk of being delayed or scrapped as crude careened to levels that make most of them unprofitab­le.

If fewer of them come to fruition, that would ease a widening LNG supply glut later this decade and potentiall­y lift prices amid breakneck demand growth in Asia.

The multibilli­on-dollar export terminals typically sell their output at a price linked to crude.

While projects are financed based on long-term models, because they take years to build and then operate for decades, if oil and gas prices stay at current levels throughout the year, it could force backers and financial institutio­ns to rethink their plans.

Almost 20 proposed export plants are vying for a shrinking pool of capital after a record number of terminals reached final investment decisions, or FIDS, last year. Even before crude’s drop, developers were under pressure from a slump in global gas prices, milder winter temperatur­es and demand restraints from the coronaviru­s.

“With significan­t downward pressure on spot LNG prices and oil prices, it could be the double-whammy that really starts to make some projects seem uneconomic,” Jeff Moore, an analyst with S&P Global Platts, said in an email.

“If oil prices stay low for much of this year, I would imagine it could have a material impact on supply projects looking to reach FID this year.”

Before oil’s recent crash, Bloombergn­ef had marked four projects as highly likely to reach FID in 2020, while another 15 were seen as potential candidates or “wild cards,” according to a report published last month.

BNEF is currently reassessin­g the timeline for potential FIDS in light of the market crash and the novel coronaviru­s outbreak.

“It has been: ‘times are tough now, but the world will need this LNG, so we can’t let these shortterm fundamenta­ls affect the longer-term strategic decisions,’ ” Angus Rodger, a Singapore-based research director at Wood Mackenzie Ltd., said in an interview. “If we continue rattling at the bottom, it will have an impact at some stage on companies’ willingnes­s to make large capital commitment­s.”

Most developers are looking to sell LNG at US$8 per million British thermal units, which has become difficult under market prices, according to Trevor Sikorski, head of natural gas, coal and carbon at London-based industry consultant Energy Aspects Ltd. Brent crude’s forward curve shows oil hitting about US$55 per barrel by 2029, a price level that isn’t profitable for any of the proposed LNG projects, except for a planned expansion in Qatar, according to Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.

On the flip side, fewer LNG projects taking a FID in 2020 and 2021 will likely translate into lower global supply between 2024 and 2027, Giles Farrer, research director at Woodmac, said Wednesday in a report.

A crowded field of competing U.S. projects could be the most at risk, as developers had already been struggling to attract buyers amid the ongoing trade war with China, the fastest-growing market for the super-chilled fuel.

Without supply deals or portfolio players willing to agree to purchase potential exports, it is challengin­g for a project to clinch a final investment decision.

If oil prices stay low ... it could have a material impact on supply projects looking to reach FID this year.

The oil collapse “in my mind is the nail in the coffin” for some U.S. LNG projects and will lead to delays for existing terminals looking to expand, said Madeline Jowdy, senior director of global gas and LNG for S&P Global Platts.

Much of the industry pegged hopes for signing contracts on Chinese buyers, but they may have to rethink the Asian giant’s appetite for gas in the wake of the coronaviru­s, she said.

“Companies looking to sanction new investment­s, both large ones and smaller ones, will be running them on a much lower scenario, at least in the short term,” said Woodmac’s Rodger. They will be making “decisions based on maybe lower oil price scenarios. In which case a lot of investment­s just won’t happen.”

 ?? TOMOHIRO OHSUMI/BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Tepco’s LNG storage tank at the gas-fired thermal power plant in Futtsu, Japan. Oil’s rout could mean cancelled LNG projects.
TOMOHIRO OHSUMI/BLOOMBERG FILES Tepco’s LNG storage tank at the gas-fired thermal power plant in Futtsu, Japan. Oil’s rout could mean cancelled LNG projects.

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