The National - News

Papua expansion points to growing demand for LNG

- CLYDE RUSSELL

If you were looking for signs that the liquefied natural gas merrygo-round is starting to spin a little faster, the announceme­nt of a planned huge expansion in Papua New Guinea is ample evidence.

Global majors Exxon Mobil and Total are considerin­g plans to double LNG exports from Papua New Guinea to about 16 million tonnes per annum, their partner Oil Search said on February 20.

If approved, three new trains would be added to the existing Exxon-operated PNG LNG facility, with natural gas from Total’s fields supplying two of the units and the third using existing fields and a new Exxon developmen­t.

While a final investment decision on the $13 billion expansion is still more than a year away, it’s a clear sign that LNG producers believe the market is headed for a deficit and that large-scale projects are once again viable.

The LNG industry’s recent developmen­t has been characteri­sed by periods of massive investment and capacity expansions followed by lulls amid fears of low prices caused by oversupply.

There has been as a rapid expansion of LNG capacity in the past decade, with eight large-scale projects being built in Australia and six in the United States, as well as some others such as the Yamal venture in Russia.

Most of these developmen­ts have started, or are due to start, within a fairly narrow time frame between 2016 and 2020, a bunching together of new capacity that led to widespread market concern over oversupply and weak prices.

While it’s still likely that there may be some oversupply this year, and perhaps until the early 2020s, the market reality is that new LNG buyers in Asia and a surge in Chinese demand have eaten away most of the expected surplus. China imported 38 million tonnes of LNG in 2017, up 46.4 per cent from the prior year, according to customs data. A few years ago there were forecasts that China would import as much as 60 million tonnes of LNG a year by the middle of the next decade, prediction­s that started to look wildly optimistic as LNG imports struggled to gain traction in the 2014-2016 period.

But a concerted effort by the authoritie­s in Beijing to switch from coal to natural gas has seen a surge in LNG imports, one that is likely to continue as cleaning up air pollution remains a priority, making 60 million tonnes per annum a realistic target.

The attractive­ness of LNG relative to coal has also been boosted by a declining spot price for LNG in Asia, which at the current $7.90 per million British thermal units (mmBtu) is less than half the peak of $20.50 reached in February 2014. It’s not just China turning to LNG, with other Asian countries including India, Pakistan, Vietnam, the Philippine­s, Sri Lanka and others all planning to increase their capacity to re-gasify the super-chilled fuel.

This new dynamic hasn’t gone unnoticed by LNG companies, which are starting to ramp up talk and action about new projects after a quiet few years spent trying to complete existing developmen­ts while navigating lower prices and buyer demands for more flexible contracts.

Australia’s Woodside Petroleum, operator of the existing 16 million tonne per annum Northwest Shelf project, recently launched an almost $2bn capital raising in order to buy control of an offshore field from partner Exxon and use the natural gas for an expansion of its Pluto LNG plant.

Mozambique’s vast resources are also getting closer to coming to market, with Anadarko Petroleum announcing a sales agreement on February 20, bringing it closer to a final investment decision.

But all these potential projects are facing quite a different market to the last round of mega-developmen­ts that are now coming on stream. Buyers, especially the majors in North Asia such as Japan, South Korea and China, have made it clear they want flexible contracts. This means an end to destinatio­n clauses, an end, or at least substantia­l changes, to the method of pricing LNG against crude oil and considerab­ly shorter-term contracts, or even more spot deliveries. This makes it hard to secure the off-take agreements needed to secure funding for multibilli­on-dollar projects, meaning it’s likely those companies with strong balance sheets that they can leverage off will enjoy greater chances of success in developing a new LNG plant. Overall, the LNG market is shifting from being staid and focused on the long term to one characteri­sed by rising volatility, shorter-term deals and increasing innovation.

New LNG buyers in Asia and a surge in Chinese demand have eaten away most of the expected surplus

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates