Business Day

Poorer countries snap up cheap LNG

- Anna Shiryaevsk­aya, Stephen Stapczynsk­i and Ann Koh

Countries from Asia to Latin America are snapping up natural gas cargoes as prices slump, helping replace more polluting fuels while easing cost pressures on the economy.

Liquefied natural gas rates have dipped below fuel oil, encouragin­g its use in power generation.

From Thailand and Bangladesh to Colombia, emerging markets were the biggest buyers in the spot market for a second straight quarter earlier this year, according to BloombergN­EF. Vietnam and the Philippine­s recently bought their first LNG shipments.

That is a sharp turnaround from last year when many government­s were struggling to ensure energy supply.

Soaring prices forced poorer nations to turn to more polluting coal or fuel oil and helped drive inflation. While they are now getting a chance to repair their economies, their gas purchases are also providing producers with a safety net by partly offsetting weak demand from heavyweigh­ts in Europe and North Asia.

“The return of LNG prices to more normalised levels benefits emerging markets the most, as their energy affordabil­ity and availabili­ty was most impacted by the LNG price spikes last year,” said Saul Kavonic, a Sydney-based energy analyst at Credit Suisse.

“Emerging markets, particular­ly in south and Southeast Asia, are the core drivers of LNG demand growth over the next 10 years.”

Many developing nations had gas-to-power projects that could burn either fuel oil or LNG, said Chris Strong, partner at law firm Vinson & Elkins in London, who specialise­s in energy transactio­ns.

That gives them the flexibilit­y to quickly react to spot gas prices dropping below $10 per million British thermal units, and comes just in time for increased electricit­y demand as summer heat sweeps across Asia.

PetroVietn­am Gas bought its first shipment of LNG for delivery in June and July. Vietnam released its power developmen­t plan this month, with a focus on wind and LNG through 2030. Thailand’s PTT has been buying cargoes for the summer.

While long-term LNG deals that are typically cheaper remain challengin­g for countries that do not have investment grade status, interest is emerging from those that do.

Buyers in India are in talks with suppliers in the US, Qatar and the UAE for 20-year deals that will protect them from extreme price volatility. Still, producers will be wary of leaning too heavily on this demand.

The increased consumptio­n may not be enough to overshadow potential long-term weakness in regions such as Europe. Many government­s are pushing for renewables in an effort to tackle climate change and calling for reduced gas use. While less polluting than coal or oil, burning gas still emits carbon.

The increased LNG buying could also be short-term as price-sensitive buyers took advantage of a weak market to help meet higher summer demand, said BloombergN­EF analyst Lujia Cao in Beijing.

DIVERTED CARGOES

Emerging nations had also taken steps to raise their cleanpower capacity and boost local exploratio­n for gas, said Ogan Kose, a managing partner at consultant Accenture. That could keep LNG demand rises in check. The lure of cheap coal also remains strong.

Pakistan, severely affected by the surge in prices as some of its suppliers diverted cargoes to higher-paying European markets, has not yet sought shipments. The nation will not build new power plants that rely on imported coal, LNG or fuel oil over the next decade and will instead look to increase its solar, wind, locally mined coal, hydro and nuclear capacity.

High gas prices pushed the country back “by a decade,” Yousaf Inam, head of sales and marketing at Pakistan LNG, said in November.

But there could be further relief for poorer nations by the middle of this decade, when the US and Qatar start putting new supply into the market. More cargoes would be available for them as Europe’s push for renewables meant there would be less demand for there, Accenture’s Kose said.

It would make the move away from dirtier fuels to LNG more likely. It “could be delayed as much as three-four years, but we still believe it will happen in the longer term”, Anders Porsborg-Smith, MD and partner at Boston Consulting Group, said.

LIQUEFIED NATURAL GAS RATES HAVE DIPPED BELOW FUEL OIL, ENCOURAGIN­G ITS USE IN POWER GENERATION

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