Windsor Star

Petronas’ review of Canadian LNG project ‘ongoing’

- JESSE SNYDER Financial Post jsnyder@postmedia.com

The head of the consortium proposing to build the Pacific North-West LNG project declined to provide a timeline on a possible final investment decision Wednesday, as the market for large-scale liquefacti­on facilities continues to weaken.

“We’re doing a total review of the project, and taking into account all the cost optimizati­on options,” said Petronas CEO Datuk Wan Zulkiflee Wan Ariffin. “That is still ongoing.” Malaysia-based Petronas is the largest stakeholde­r in the roughly $36-billion LNG export facility in Prince Rupert, B.C. A final investment decision on the proposal has been delayed for years amid a weakened outlook for LNG markets and environmen­tal opposition to the project.

The Petronas CEO said the company still considers its Canadian LNG push to be a worthwhile effort, as the company has already invested heavily in its sprawling natural gas asset base in northern British Columbia.

“We’ve got huge resources there, and that’s something we’re determined to monetize,” Wan Zulkiflee told the Financial Post Wednesday.

Natural gas producers in the Montney formation, as it is known, have been squeezed in recent years as a flood of new natural gas production in the U.S. Midwest enters the market. That supply glut has been exacerbate­d by a pipeline shortage in northern B.C., as midstream companies scramble to expand capacity.

Late in 2016, proponents behind the much smaller $1.6-billion Woodfibre LNG terminal announced they would move ahead with the project, which will be located in Squamish, B.C.

However, none of the large-scale liquefacti­on facilities have gone ahead as a massive LNG buildout in the U.S. and Australia in recent years has led to a global oversupply.

Companies around the world have deferred projects as a result. Wan Zulkiflee said that only about six million tons per annum of LNG capacity received a final investment decision in 2016, while another 60 mtpa was deferred — a prospect he is “concerned” about.

About 270 million ton per annum of LNG was traded globally in 2016. That figure could rise to as much as 365 mtpa by 2018, according to Charif Souki, the CEO of Houston-based Tellurian Inc.

Souki said Wednesday he was “very bullish on continuing to build LNG facilities in the U.S.” due to its cost competitiv­eness.

 ??  ?? Datuk Wan Zulkiflee Wan Ariffin
Datuk Wan Zulkiflee Wan Ariffin

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