The Denver Post

Pipelines on wheels: LNG giant turns to trucks

- By Dan Murtaugh

Gas is in such hot demand in China right now it’s allowing a quirky market to flourish: transporti­ng the fuel on trucks.

Call them pipelines on wheels. The country’s top suppliers are loading liquefied natural gas (LNG) onto tanker trucks and delivering it to users to make up for insufficie­nt pipeline coverage inland. The method is so effective ENN Group is using it as a primary way to move LNG from its new terminal.

This new kind of gas market has thrived in China over the past few years as the government’s bluesky policies boosted demand for the cleaner-burning fuel faster than pipelines can be built to support them. It’s also unregulate­d, allowing nimble sellers to benefit from rising prices during peak consumptio­n seasons, while the city-gate benchmark remains at government-set rates.

“We haven’t seen this kind of volume in trucked LNG anywhere else in the world” said Xizhou Zhou, head of China energy research for IHS Markit. “This market in China is a reflection of the market distortion caused by regulated city-gate prices, increasing supply and demand, and price volatility.”

ENN is betting this method of transporti­ng LNG will endure. The distributo­r’s new terminal in Zhoushan, a tiny island at the mouth of the Yangtze River, is the first in the world built to load the majority of its imports onto trucks instead of reheating them to their gaseous state for pipelines or power plants.

The facility is designed to import about 3 million tons of LNG a year, with 2 million destined for trucks and the rest for pipelines. But trucking the fuel is expensive. It costs nearly six times more than piping it, according to a study by the King Abdullah Petroleum Studies & Research Center in Saudi Arabia.

Companies such as ENN are happy to take this pricier route because it can be more lucrative. Trucked LNG sells for about 4,500 yuan ($650) a ton. That’s two-thirds higher than benchmark Shanghai citygate rates. Last winter, trucked LNG prices jumped to 7,400 yuan amid a nationwide gas shortage.

The rise of this freewheeli­ng market shows how China’s natural gas industry, long under the control of the government, is moving toward liberaliza­tion. The nation has taken steps toward a free market by auctioning off gas and import terminal space on exchanges, granting third parties access to assets operated mainly by stateowned giants, and revising its pricing mechanism.

Those efforts are also aimed at improving supply efficiency to meet the roughly 20 percent surge in demand. China’s unpreceden­ted crackdown on its noxious smog by replacing coal furnaces with gas burners has become one of the most important factors shaping the global energy market.

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