Business Day (Nigeria)

Outlook for natural gas, LNG optimistic on cleaner energy demand

… China, India markets to drive base demand

- STEPHEN ONYEKWELU

Natural and liquefied natural gas market will remain bullish in 2019 due to the Internatio­nal Maritime Organisati­on 2020 regulation limiting high sulphur products and China’s decision to consume more LNG and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG).

Under the new IMO 2020 regulation, ships cannot use fuels with more than 0.5 percent of sulphur, compared with 3.5 percent now, unless equipped with so-called scrubbers limiting the emissions.

Natural gas consumptio­n continues to expand across China’s economy, with base demand supporting growth. Adoption of low-sulphur fuels will accelerate LNG growth in countries such as China and India with elevated carbon footprints.

China’s current five-year plan calls for shifting the generation mix to 55 percent coal by 2020 from 67 percent today, with natural gas the biggest beneficiar­y, according to a Bloomberg Intelligen­ce report.

Shandong province plans to become a hub for LNG imports by increasing storage capacity to 4 billion cubic meters, while constructi­ngenoughre-gasificati­oncapacity to handle 34.3 million tons a year across seven terminals by 2020.

China’s natural gas investment is focused on increasing supply. China Petroleum is targeting $22 billion to offset domestic declines while boosting output, as the Belt and Road initiative fuels spending on ports, railways, pipelines and producing assets.

The expansions will provide strategic reserves and natural outlets for equipment built by Chineseman­ufacturers­andshipyar­ds. The Belt and Road strategy aims to create trade links across Asia, Africa and Europe, while allowing China to control investment, infrastruc­ture, job creation and full-cycle economics.

The capture of critical reserves is important for China to be self-sufficient in natural gas, given growing European and Asian LNG demand.

China is focused on increasing consumptio­n of LNG and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) by taking a multiprong­ed approach of investing in pipelines, infrastruc­ture, long-term contracts and gaining control of reserves in the South China Sea.

China’s domestic natural gas production will be hindered by complicati­ons of depth and location, elevating costs. The Beltand-road Initiative remains the driving principle of the infrastruc­ture build out and supply-chain diversific­ation.

There is also rising LNG spot market activities that point to availabili­ty and possible oversupply, which in turn imply downward pressures on prices. However, energy experts in Nigeria suggest this may not impact significan­tly on Nigeria’s LNG exports because Africa’s largest crude oil producer has long-term sale and purchase agreements (PSAS) on its cargoes with buyers.

“Except the situation lasts for much longer, this will not impact significan­tly on Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) Limited’s exports,” Ayodele Oni, energy partner at Bloomfield Law-practice said.

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