Khaleej Times

Alternate power

- Ashwani Kumar

Energy subsidies can’t continue longer, and we need greater efficienci­es as the world moves more toward LNG and natural gas.

abu dhabi — UAE Minister for Energy Suhail bin Mohammed Faraj Al Mazrouei called for greater efficienci­es as the world is moving towards LNG and natural gas. He pointed out that the subsidy on gas and electricit­y sold to power-generating companies cannot continue for long.

During a panel discussion at the Abu Dhabi Internatio­nal Petroleum Exhibition and Conference (Adipec), he said none of the ministers would like to talk about average efficienci­es of turbine fleets.

“It is an area of improvemen­t. Something needs to be done as soon as possible. Some of the gas supply that goes to the power sector is subsidised and it cannot stay for long. That subsidy has incentivis­ed burning lots of fuel that could be saved for industry or other purposes. We have to work towards efficienci­es. Through efficienci­es, we can save a lot of gas which is burnt today. It will make our environmen­t cleaner and the excess gas we save will supply us for future requiremen­ts, especially in the power sector.”

The minister noted that LNG is an efficient and clean source of energy. “It will reduce emissions, fossil fuel consumptio­n, improve deforestat­ion and also environmen­tal conditions in general.”

Al Mazrouei noted that Adnoc is working on gas networking — an interconne­ction in the region. The minister spoke about trading in power instead of selling gas.

“A power trading such as in Europe and other places has been proven to be beneficial for all. This is the future of the Middle East,” the minister said.

“Middle East is going to be a

Subsidies have incentivis­ed burning lots of fuel that could be saved for industry or other purposes Suhail bin Mohammed Faraj Al Mazrouei, UAE Minister for Energy

power house, first of all within the region and possibly to Europe in the next 10 to 20 years if we do things right. We have to stop burning gas at lower efficient turbines because it’s subsidised by the government,” he reiterated.

Meanwhile, Bahrain Minister of Oil Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa Al Khalifa said LNG and natural gas will be the trend for next few years. “There will be an oversupply next year. There is 40 million tonnes of LNG coming into the market.”

He said it is difficult to price gas now. “It is challengin­g looking at gas supply contracts. It will be good for the gas business to have a short period of oversupply to increase the market size.”

Asia driving LNG demand

Separately, top industry experts said that growing demand from Asia, particular­ly from China, will underpin market growth for LNG but importers are also pushing to benefit from more flexible pricing.

Cheniere Energy executive vicepresid­ent and chief commercial officer Anatol Feygin said Asia accounts for 70 per cent of global LNG imports. He predicts that China, which first imported LNG in 2006, will become the largest importer after Japan “within a year or two” as the market continues to expand.

“It has been growing at around 2.5 million tonnes per annum on average over the past decade,” said Feygin.

“We see that growth rate increasing, possibly more than doubling, over the next three to five years and probably well beyond that, as China’s economy continues to grow, urbanise and as it aims to improve urban air quality and control carbon emissions.”

With more competitio­n among suppliers, there is strong pressure to move away from the multi-year contracts that previously dominated the LNG trade. Importers who once wanted contracts that locked in their share of a limited supply for several years now want short-term deals so they can benefit in a buyer’s market.

Kunio Nohata, a member of the board, senior executive officer and chief executive of the power business division at Tokyo Gas, said that to offer reasonable gas prices to customers, the company needs to pursue a competitiv­e LNG price.

“Tokyo Gas has been developing and enhancing its gas and LNG value chain by tapping new markets and increasing value to our customers,” said Nohata.

Feygin expects new supply will be needed early in the next decade to meet predicted demand growth, but that US exporters will most likely expand existing operations, which have infrastruc­ture already in place, rather than commit to greenfield projects.

“We see the global market evolving rapidly at present, and the speed of change looks set to increase as US volumes ramp up over the next few years,” Feygin said. “However, I also think we are still quite a way from being a fully commoditis­ed product, like crude oil, for example.”

— ashwani@khaleejtim­es.com

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