THISDAY

Nigeria’s LNG Market Share Threatened as US Grabs 20%…

- Chineme Okafor

in Abuja By 2023, the United States will account for close to three quarter of all Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) export growth and its global market share will jump to 20 per cent, from the current position of four per cent, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) has said.

IEA made this disclosure in Gas 2018, its latest gas market report.

Effectivel­y putting Nigeria’s aspiration to grow its traded LNG market share to 10 per cent under pressure as recently disclosed by the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), Dr. Maikanti Baru, the IEA stated that one of the major changes expected by 2023 would be the US leading growth in gas production and export of LNG.

In 2017, the World LNG Report indicated that Nigeria occupied the position of the fourth largest LNG exporter in 2016, while the US occupied the 16th position, but the Managing Director of the Nigeria LNG Limited (NLNG), Tony Attah, warned at the maiden edition of the Nigeria Internatio­nal Petroleum Summit (NIPS) in February that delay in taking the final investment decision (FID) in different LNG projects in the country could rob the country of its place in the market.

Notwithsta­nding, the IEA explained in the Gas 2018 report, obtained by THISDAY that strong demand growth from China, greater industrial demand, and rising supplies from the United States, would transform global natural gas markets over the next five years. He added that global gas demand would grow at an average rate of 1.6 per cent per year, reaching just over 4,100 billion cubic meters (bcm) in 2023, up from 3,740bcm in 2017.

“In the next five years, global gas markets are being re-shaped by three major structural shifts.

“China is set to become the world’s largest gas importer within two-to-three years, US production and exports will rise dramatical­ly strongly and industry is replacing power generation as the leading growth sector,” said IEA’s Executive Director, Dr Fatih Birol.

According to IEA, Chinese gas demand is projected to grow by 60 per cent between 2017 and 2023, underpinne­d by policies aimed at reducing local air pollution by switching from coal to gas.

It added that China alone would account for 37 per cent of the growth in global demand in the next five years to become the largest natural gas importer by 2019, overtaking Japan which is reportedly one of the destinatio­ns for Nigeria’s LNG.

The IEA also predicted strong growth in gas use in other parts of Asia, including in South and Southeast Asia, driven by strong economic growth and efforts to improve air quality.

It explained the US, Australia, and Russia were poised to increase the global liquefacti­on capacity by 30 per cent by 2023, clearly indicating Nigeria was not in considerat­ion in this regards, despite Baru’s recent assurances at the World Gas Conference (WGC) in Washington DC that the country had put in credible measures to capture 10 per cent of LNG market share for itself.

“For end-use sectors, industry will become the largest contributo­r to the increase in global gas demand to 2023, taking the lead from power generation, which had historical­ly held this role."

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