Calgary Herald

Global boom in gas taking toll

Woodside scraps $ 40B project as glut ‘ killing off’ weaker industry players

- NAUREEN S. MALIK AND STEPHEN STAPCZYNSK­I

The global LNG boom is turning into a war of attrition amid a glut in the seaborne natural gas market.

The conflict claimed a major casualty this week when Woodside Petroleum Ltd., with partners Royal Dutch Shell and BP, scrapped plans for the $ 40 billion Browse liquefied natural gas project in Australia amid the market slump.

More cancellati­ons or delays are expected as current supply kills any incentive to invest, says BMI Research.

Regulators this month rejected Veresen Inc.’ s request to build a terminal in Oregon, partly because it couldn’t prove there was enough demand.

The world’s supply of liquefied natural gas is set to surge over the next five years as projects already under constructi­on in countries including Australia and the United States add to an emerging glut, say analysts.

That’s pressuring prices already plunging because of the collapse in crude, which serves as a benchmark for some LNG contracts.

Browse is only one of the many LNG projects doomed to fall by the wayside because the market’s slump, said energy consultanc­y PIRA.

“The current pricing environmen­t is simply killing off the weaker ones and Browse was definitely one of those,” said Madeline Jowdy, senior director of global gas and LNG at PIRA in New York.

“It’s going to look like a bloodbath in the 2017 and 2018 time frame with cutthroat LNG prices.”

The U. S., awash in so much gas that prices there touched the lowest levels since the 1990s, sent its first shale exports from Cheniere Energy’s Sabine Pass terminal in Louisiana in February. This week, the first tanker set sail from Chevron’s massive Gorgon LNG terminal project off northwest Australia.

Just two years ago, exporting LNG from the U. S. sounded like a lucrative opportunit­y for shale drillers. Buyers in Northeast Asia were paying $ 20 per million British thermal units more than spot Henry Hub gas prices.

That premium has collapsed, this week trading around $ 2.70.

“It’s going to be a really difficult period and some companies are not fully prepared for the changes that are coming to the market,” said Jason Feer, head of business intelligen­ce at Poten & Partners in Houston.

“There has never been a period where the oversupply is going to be as big as it is going to be over the next few years. The question for some people won’t be, ‘ How do I make money?’ It will be, ‘ How do I manage my losses.’ ”

Investors are yet to sanction a single LNG export project in Canada. Companies including Shell and Petronas are among proponents of about two dozen facilities on the country’s Pacific and Atlantic coasts. AltaGas Ltd., which was leading one of the smaller proposals off British Columbia, last month shelved plans after failing to line up customers.

Given the long lead times for LNG projects, a supply squeeze may develop in the first half of next decade if investment decisions aren’t made in the next several years, said Saul Kavonic, an analyst at energy consulting firm Wood Mackenzie Ltd.

While the U. S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has rejected Veresen’s initial proposal for an Oregon terminal, the company this week said Japan’s Jera Co., one of the world’s largest LNG buyers, had signed a non- binding deal for LNG from the project.

The contract would help Jera develop its trading business in Asia because it doesn’t restrict the final destinatio­ns of the shipments.

 ?? KOJI SASAHARA/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/ FILES ?? Analysts predict that the world’s supply of liquefied natural gas will surge over the next handful of years as major projects already under constructi­on in countries including Australia and the United States add to an emerging glut.
KOJI SASAHARA/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/ FILES Analysts predict that the world’s supply of liquefied natural gas will surge over the next handful of years as major projects already under constructi­on in countries including Australia and the United States add to an emerging glut.

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