China Daily (Hong Kong)

Suppliers hitting the gas

Firms finding methods to increase supply as demand for clean energy grows in northern regions

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s battle against air pollution has had an unintended consequenc­e: a shortage of heating fuel supply is affecting many northern cities this winter, boosting domestic prices for natural gas to a three-year high.

Analysts believe the soaring demand for liquefied natural gas, the slow constructi­on of pipelines to import more supply and the lack of gas storage facilities have all contribute­d to the country’s gas shortage, despite a global supply glut of natural gas.

“China’s soaring demand for LNG imports this year has been driven by cold weather, coal-to-gas switching policy directives to curb air pollution, and large-scale replacemen­t of coal-fired heating with gas-fired boilers in domestic households,” said Abache Abreu, an analyst focusing on Asia LNG from S&P Global Platts.

“China’s spot demand growth potential might also be limited by high terminal capacity utilizatio­n and further growth in China’s LNG demand might be limited by infrastruc­ture constraint­s, as terminals are currently running above capacity in the key winter demand center of northeast China,” he added.

“Even if the price gap between China’s northern and southern gas markets was wide enough to make the transport of regasified LNG from the southern terminals to the north economical, pipeline infrastruc­ture connecting both ends is not sufficient to accommodat­e the current seasonal demand surge,” Abreu said.

Figures released by the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, China’s top economic regulator, show that liquefied natural gas consumptio­n has witnessed sharp growth this year, reaching 209.7 billion cubic meters during the January-November period, up 18.9 percent yearon-year.

Full-year growth in 2016 was 7 percent.

Li Li, energy research director at energy consulting firm ICIS China, echoed Abreu’s comments, saying LNG terminals in China are facing capacity bottleneck­s and logistical constraint­s.

“One of the most significan­t contributo­rs is the limited capacity of distribute­d gas storage infrastruc­ture,” she said.

Li pointed out that natural gas demand varies a lot from season to season.

“You are going to have a lot of demand in winter months for heating and much in the summer months for refrigerat­ion, and less so in between,” she said.

“It’s necessary we come up with massive gas storage facilities to avoid large scale gas shortages, which is very likely to happen in face of cold snaps,” she added.

On Dec 1, the growing appetite for gas pushed domestic LNG prices to a record high of 9,000 yuan ($1,360) a metric ton in some regions.

By early December, China had imported 32.7 million tons of LNG in 2017, just below the 33.3 million tons imported by South Korea, according to S&P Global Platts Analytics, and well above the 25.7 million tons China imported in the full year of 2016.

China has become the main driver of rising LNG spot prices and a key destinatio­n for growing supplies from throughout the Asia Pacific region, it said.

Xu Bo, a senior analyst with China National Petroleum Corporatio­n’s Economics and Technology Research Institute, said natural gas consumptio­n is expected to reach 230 billion cu m (165 million tons) this year, with 20 billion cu m coming from the coal-togas transition.

To secure gas supply, China’s State-owned energy firms, including CNPC and China National Offshore Oil Corporatio­n, China’s biggest LNG importer, are maximizing production at domestic gas fields.

CNOOC said it planned to use more than 100 trucks making round-the-clock supply runs, picking up fuel from import terminals in Guangdong province and transporti­ng it to northern regions — a round trip of more than 2,200 kilometers — to help ease a burgeoning heating crisis there.

CNPC, the country’s largest oil and gas producer by annual output, and supplier of more than 70 percent of the natural gas used in China, said it would provide 70 billion cu m of natural gas this year to alleviate gas shortages during the heating season.

All the equipment and staff of the company are in full operation, it said.

Qu Guangxue, a CNPC spokesman, said the company will also continue negotiatin­g with Central Asian nations for additional stocks to ensure adequate supplies.

According to Jing Chunmei, a researcher with China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, the ultimate solution lies in allowing more social capital in LNG infrastruc­ture constructi­on to lower costs and come up with a market-based pricing mechanism.

 ?? TONG JIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Technology staff of China Petroleum & Chemical Corporatio­n inspect production facilities in Puyang, Central China’s Henan province.
TONG JIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY Technology staff of China Petroleum & Chemical Corporatio­n inspect production facilities in Puyang, Central China’s Henan province.

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