Global energy players converge on Washington as China
trade war lurks
Send a link to a friend
[June 25, 2018]
By Julie Gordon
(Reuters) - The world’s biggest oil and gas
players are gathering for a summit in Washington D.C. this week that
will be overshadowed by the specter of shifting trade patterns due to a
trade dispute between the United States and China.
The uncertainty comes at a historic moment for the United States, which
has become the world’s biggest natural gas producer, one of the top
crude oil producers, and a growing exporter of both. It will host the
triennial World Gas Conference for the first time in 30 years.
"The timing is unfortunate," said Charlie Riedl, executive director of
the Center for LNG, noting the U.S.-China trade scuffle has ramped up
uncertainty just as the next wave of U.S. liquefied natural gas
producers are trying to finalize offtake deals needed to start
construction.
Beijing this month proposed 25 percent tariffs on U.S. petroleum
imports, a retaliation against President Donald Trump’s tariffs on
Chinese goods that is expected to dent sales to the U.S. shale
industry's largest customer - adding new pressure for firms that produce
natural gas as a byproduct of crude production.
While LNG imports have so far been spared, the industry is concerned
that the supercooled gas could be next if China's talks with Washington
sour – something that would disadvantage U.S. developers but help rivals
also courting China.
"I don't know that it prevents deals from happening, but I think it
gives buyers pause," Riedl said.
The conference will draw executives from global energy giants like Exxon
Mobil Corp <XOM.N>, BP Plc <BP.L>, and Total SA <TOTF.PA>, along with
senior officials from the U.S. State Department’s energy bureau, and
ministers from energy producers and consumers like Argentina and
Indonesia.
It follows last week’s OPEC meetings in Vienna, where the partner
countries agreed on a modest increase in oil production from next month,
following calls from major consumers to curb rising fuel costs.
The Trump administration is eager to expand its "energy dominance"
agenda by offering more U.S. oil, coal and LNG to Europe and other
takers, as an alternative to supplies from geopolitical rivals like
Russia, while also forging bonds with big players like China.
The United States has made some inroads with sales of LNG to Poland and
Lithuania, but faces a tough task selling large amounts of LNG to wider
parts of Europe, especially as Russia's Gazprom <GAZP.MM> and a
consortium of partners advance a new pipeline under the Baltic Sea to
Germany.
[to top of second column] |
Gasoline drips off a
nozzle during refueling at a gas station in Altadena, California
March 24, 2012. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
"We want to see a global gas market that is market-driven, prevents countries
from using gas for political purposes, and drives economic growth across the
world," Frank Fannon, the top U.S. energy diplomat, told Reuters.
GAS GLUT, LNG SHORTAGE
Rising crude prices have U.S. producers drilling for more oil than ever, with
natural gas produced as a byproduct. While some of that gas is going into power
generation - offsetting coal power even as Trump has promised to bail out
struggling nuclear and coal plants - there is still more than is needed
domestically.
That has producers hoping for new export capacity.
Globally, there has been a dearth of major go-ahead decisions on LNG projects
since 2015, as sagging energy prices and worries over a looming glut left buyers
hesitant.
But the glut has not materialized and global demand has taken off, fanning fears
of an LNG shortage instead. Gas trade rose 6.2 percent in 2017, according to a
report by BP, with LNG demand up more than 10 percent in its best year since
2010.
“The needle is moving significantly, both on the supply and demand side," said
Eric Fell, an analyst with Genscape.
That should smooth the path for deal-making at the four-day Washington
conference, said industry players and analysts, despite the trade dispute with
Beijing.
The Asian superpower is not the only buyer in town, said Gregory Vesey, chief
executive of LNG Ltd <LNG.AX>, which is developing the Magnolia LNG project in
Louisiana.
"All across Europe there are opportunities that are starting to feel very real,"
he said, noting European gas prices are up, while U.S. LNG prices have stayed
flat.
(Reporting by Julie Gordon in Vancouver; Additional reporting by Timothy Gardner
in Washington; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Matthew Lewis)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |