The National - News

Industry experts assert that soaring prices of gas are ‘not sustainabl­e’

- SHWETA JAIN

The record high prices of liquefied natural gas are not sustainabl­e, even as a supply crisis intensifie­s in the UK and Europe, according to industry analysts.

The natural gas prices in Europe surged to a new high on Tuesday, with prices for November delivery rising 23 per cent to €117 ($135) a megawatt hour, up from €15 six months ago. Gas is expected to continue to trade higher for the rest of the year as the Northern Hemisphere enters winter. LNG prices in Europe and Asia have risen to record highs this year.

In response, Spain and France called on the EU to coordinate efforts to tackle the energy crisis.

The UK has been hardest hit by soaring gas prices, and on Tuesday prices for November increased 14 per cent to £2.79 per therm – the unit of measuremen­t for natural gas use over time.

“[LNG] prices are absolutely high and there’s no fundamenta­l reason for them to remain this high,” said De la Rey Venter, executive vice president of LNG West, which is accountabl­e for a large part of Shell’s natural gas assets in Canada, Europe, Africa and Latin America.

The gas market has faced a “perfect storm” of the Covid-19 pandemic, abnormal weather, supply concerns and increased demand, Mr Venter said. “But this turbulence will pass. It might take a while but the market will stabilise.”

As a result, European government­s are rushing to find ways to limit the costs as scant natural gas reserves expose the continent to price surges and possible shortages if the winter is particular­ly cold.

Natural gas is cheaper in the US, for instance, which produces its own, while Europe must rely on imports.

But LNG prices are “not sustainabl­e” at today’s prices, said Alan Heng, interim chief executive of Singapore’s Pavilion Energy.

“It’s the biggest deterrent for anybody who wants to think of LNG as a fuel. It’s not cheap and not easily bankable,” Mr Heng said.

More alternativ­es are needed to handle the situation, said Mark Brownstein, senior vice president of energy at Environmen­tal Defence Fund.

“Earlier alternativ­es, when gas prices were high, were either pumping more gas or going to coal,” Mr Brownstein said. “The degree to which natural gas continues to play a role also matters a lot.”

Technology will also play a crucial role in the future of energy, Mr Brownstein said.

“Technology has come on much quicker and more robust than most have predicted … [consider its role in the] evolution of renewables, solar and evolution of electric vehicles.”

Mr Heng said Asia “will quickly create scale and take off ... maybe faster than anticipate­d”.

He said renewables had become “technologi­cally competitiv­e”.

Pursuing structural decarbonis­ation of upstream, liquefacti­on and shipping are crucial factors to those selling gas, industry experts said.

The UK has been hardest hit by soaring gas prices, and on Tuesday prices for November increased 14 per cent

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