Vancouver Sun

QATAR RAISES LNG OUTPUT

Aims to stay top fuel supplier

- MOHAMMED ALY SERGIE, ANNA SHIRYAEVSK­AYA AND KELLY GILBLOM

Qatar just undermined Australia’s efforts to overtake it as the world’s biggest producer of liquefied natural gas.

While the Gulf sheikhdom may soon slip to second place behind Australia as top supplier of the fuel, it’s poised to retain the No. 1 spot within the next seven years after Qatar Petroleum said it will raise output by 30 per cent. Such an increase would surpass Australia’s planned expansion and reinforce Qatar’s role as a major global supplier — even amid a regional dispute and commercial boycott by a Saudi-led coalition of countries.

Qatar’s message to the rest of the LNG world is, “’We are going to take a huge chunk of the incrementa­l market,’” Jonathan Stern, chairman and senior research fellow at the Natural Gas Research Programme of the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, said by phone.

Qatar is also throwing down the gauntlet to Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter.

“Basically what it’s saying is, ‘We are going to promote LNG as a substitute for oil,”’ he said. “That’s a very confrontat­ional thing to say.”

Qatar seeks to produce 100 million tonnes of LNG, or about 40 per cent of last year’s global supply, up from its current level of 77 million tons, Saad Sherida Al Kaabi, chief executive officer of the state-run producer, told reporters on Tuesday in Doha. Australia, which has spent US$200 billion to build LNG-exporting plants, may surpass Qatar as the biggest shipper as early as next year, but lose its leadership by the middle of the next decade given Qatar’s latest plans, according to data from Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

The U.S., the world’s biggest gas producer thanks to its shale boom, will likely remain the third-biggest supplier of LNG and may secure the lead if it adds plants beyond those already approved for constructi­on, according to BNEF’s outlook. Australia may expand output to 94.3 million tonnes by 2030 if it adds new projects, according to BNEF. However, domestic shortages of the fuel may limit exports from the Pacific nation.

Qatar Petroleum is doubling to four billion cubic feet a day its target for output capacity at a new project in the North Field, Qatar’s section of the world’s largest natural gas deposit, Al Kaabi said. Demand for liquefied gas is growing faster than that for oil, he said. QP’s plan to boost output from the North Field came just a day after Iran signed a deal with Total SA to develop its share of the same deposit.

“LNG supplies are abundant now, and there are many projects under developmen­t, but the expected growth in demand is very large,” Al Kaabi said. “All the studies show that between 2021 and 2024 there will be a shortage of gas because of higher demand. Therefore, the launch of our project will be between 2022 and 2024, which is the period when there will be market demand.”

Boosting gas output alone isn’t enough to escalate the regional crisis, said Emma Richards, a senior oil and gas analyst at BMI Research. “Qatar is not backing down,” she said from London. “By the same token, they haven’t done anything to try to provoke the others and try to make this worse than it already is.”

The sheikhdom won’t halt shipments of natural gas to the neighbouri­ng United Arab Emirates, Al Kaabi said, even though the U.A.E. is among the nations trying to isolate the smaller state. Qatar’s neighbours insist that it cool ties with Iran.

Qatar denies the coalition’s allegation­s that it sponsors terrorism and has said the group’s demands were designed to be so tough that it would reject them.

The U.A.E. imports gas from Qatar through a pipeline operated by Dolphin Energy Ltd., which is owned by Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala Developmen­t Co., Total SA and Occidental Petroleum Corp.

The link supplies gas to the U.A.E. and Oman, and can send 3.2 billion cubic feet a day, though it only uses about two-thirds of that capacity.

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