The Sun (Malaysia)

Petronas nod for Canada LNG project

> Malaysian national oil firm and partners give final investment decisions for US$14b facility

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SINGAPORE/VANCOUVER: A massive liquefied natural gas (LNG) export project in Canada has been given the final go-ahead from project partners, LNG Canada said yesterday, making it the first major new LNG project to win approval globally in five years.

First gas from the project is expected before 2025, aiming to feed an expected surge in demand for the cleaner fuel from hungry Asian buyers, mainly China.

LNG Canada is the single largest infrastruc­ture investment in Canadian history and its constructi­on provides a much needed boost for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s ruling Liberals, who have struggled with an exodus of global majors from Alberta’s oil sands and a series of setbacks in building a crude pipeline expansion to Canada’s West Coast.

The project will allow LNG to be shipped to Asian markets far faster than from the US Gulf Coast.

Stakeholde­rs Royal Dutch Shell, Malaysia’s Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas), PetroChina Co Ltd, Korea Gas Corp and Japan’s Mitsubishi Corp have given final investment decisions, LNG Canada said on its website.

Shell said constructi­on of the project at Kitimat in British Colombia will start immediatel­y, with first LNG expected before the middle of next decade.

Mitsubishi said the total estimated developmen­t cost of the planned Kitimat LNG plant is US$14 billion (RM58 billion). Earlier estimates of the total cost of the project had put it at C$40 billion (RM97 billion).

Shell said the project will initially export LNG from two processing units or trains totalling 14 million tonnes per annum, with the potential to expand to four trains in the future.

PetroChina and Kogas approved project financing late last week while Shell, Petronas and Mitsubishi made their announceme­nts yesterday.

LNG Canada is the first large-scale convention­al greenfield LNG project to reach a final investment decision (FID) since 2013, said Saul Kavonic, director for Asia Pacific markets and head of energy research at Credit Suisse in Australia.

“We see that LNG Canada’s FID would signal the appetite to invest in LNG is back,” Kavonic said.

The project owners will be responsibl­e for providing their own natural gas supply and will individual­ly offtake and market their share of LNG, LNG Canada said in the statement. In the past, project owners typically relied on long-term sale and purchase agreements with end-users to underpin financing.

The constructi­on decision also comes amid a Sino-US trade spat that has led to tariffs being imposed by China on LNG shipments from the United States, threatenin­g US President Donald Trump’s energy dominance plan.

Energy consultanc­y Wood MacKenzie said it appeared the project partners had pushed hard to reach an investment decision, with rival projects being progressed in Qatar, Russia, Mozambique and the United States.

“I don’t see it as a case of replacing US cargoes, more about meeting projected demand growth,” said Wood Mackenzie analyst Nicholas Browne.

WoodMac expects global LNG demand to grow from 290 million tonnes in 2017 to nearly 450 million tonnes in 2025.

“That equates to a phenomenal 50% growth. So there is certainly demand for new LNG,” said Browne. – Reuters

 ??  ?? The entrance to the LNG Canada project site in Kitimat in northweste­rn British Columbia.
The entrance to the LNG Canada project site in Kitimat in northweste­rn British Columbia.

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