The Borneo Post

Qatar raises gas capacity amid Gulf

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DOHA: Qatar announced it planned to raise liquefied natural gas ( LNG) capacity by 30 per cent in an apparent show of strength in its dispute with Gulf neighbours who have imposed political and economic sanctions on Doha.

The unexpected move came as Qatar appears to be preparing itself for greater economic independen­ce should the dispute with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain become protracted.

Its immediate effect will be to worsen a glut on the LNG market where Australia, the United States and Russia vie.

The Gulf states and Egypt have severed diplomatic and transport ties with Doha, accusing it of supporting terrorism and courting regional rival Iran. Qatar denies the accusation. The Arab states, who have presented Doha with a list of demands, meet on Wednesday to discuss how to end the crisis; or they could impose more sanctions, which may include asking trade partners to pick a side in the rift.

Qatar Petroleum’s chief executive said the firm would increase gas production from its giant North Field, which it shares with Iran, by 20 per cent after new gas developmen­t.

In April, Qatar lifted a self-imposed ban on developmen­t of the North Field, the world’s biggest natural gas field, and announced a new project to develop its southern section, increasing output in five to seven years.

That new project will raise Qatar’s total LNG production capacity by 30 per cent to 100 million tonnes from 77 million tonnes per year, CEO Saad al-Kaabi told a news conference.

“Once completed...this project will raise the production of the State of Qatar to about 6 million

Once completed...this project will raise the production of the State of Qatar to about 6 million barrels of oil equivalent per day. Saad al-Kaabi, Qatar Petroleum CEO

barrels of oil equivalent per day,” Kaabi said.

With such low production costs and LNG facilities closer to buyers in Europe and Asia, the Qatari move means US producers could struggle to sell their LNG competitiv­ely and projects still needing finance could struggle to find investors.

So far only Cheniere exports US LNG, but there are project proposals with a total capacity of some 150 million tonnes/year.

Energy sales have driven Qatar’s rapid rise as a regional player, with vast infrastruc­ture projects and widening diplomatic influence as well as a role in the Syrian conflict that is viewed with suspicion by Gulf neighbours.

German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel said in Jeddah the stand- off between Qatar and its Arab neighbours would best be solved by an agreement across the region to prevent the financing of terrorism, “We all know that (this support) is not organised by states, but often by private persons,” he added.

“But we must somehow succeed in ending support in the region for extremist and terrorist organisati­ons.” The glut has already driven down prices.

Asian spot LNG prices LNG-AS have fallen more than 40 per cent this year to US$ 5.50 per mmBtu and by 70 per cent from peaks in 2014. — Reuters

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