Global Times

Australian LNG exports to Chinese market at crossroads as trade tensions intensify

- By GT staff reporters

A healthy bilateral relationsh­ip will be important to Australian liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports to China, which will be the only meaningful market in the coming decade but one that is undergoing a structural change, Chinese industry insiders said on Tuesday.

Some long-term Australian LNG supply contracts are expected to expire against the backdrop of rising trade friction, with China slapping an 80 percent antidumpin­g and anti-subsidy tariff on Australian barley last week, and temporaril­y halted four Australian beef plants to export beef to China.

On a longer horizon, Chinese experts pointed out that LNG imports are leaning toward spot contracts and away from long-term contracts.

Australia is the current leader in LNG exports to China. In the first quarter, the country exported 6.92 million tons of LNG, compared with Qatar's 2.33 million tons. Along with iron ore and coal, LNG is one of the most valuable Australian merchandis­e exports to China.

“Australia's LNG market share in China is likely to fall in the coming years, ceding market share to the US and Qatar, should Canberra's tensions with China continue,” Guo Jian, gas marketing director at Sublime China Informatio­n Co, a Chinese commodity market informatio­n provider, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

There won't be many alternativ­e markets for the squeezedou­t Australian natural gas, with the EU, North America, Japan and South Korea being saturated in the coming years, Guo noted. In contrast, China's new LNG receiving capacity will be 30 million tons a year.

Most of the Chinese natural gas-fueled power stations were built around 2010 and some of them are now seeing their first long-term contracts nearing expiry, Guo said. Long-term contracts traditiona­lly account for 80 percent of deals, and this includes the majority of Australian LNG deals.

Long-term contracts are bad for importers amid the current global crude price crunch, and they also make it hard for receiving facilities to share capacity with third-party importers, fueling rising demand in China to replace contracts with spot deals, experts noted.

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