Looming large: Shell's LNG Canada seen as tip of
megaproject iceberg
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[October 03, 2018]
By Sabina Zawadzki and Henning Gloystein
LONDON/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The launch of
a massive liquefied natural gas (LNG) export project in Canada could
fire the starting gun on a wave of other approvals around the world,
potentially curbing a supply crunch expected after 2020.
Royal Dutch Shell on Tuesday said it would export LNG from the west of
Canada by 2025 after approving a C$40 billion ($31.2 billion) project
capable of initially producing 14 million tonnes a year.
That comes just weeks after Qatar, the world's top LNG exporter, said it
would expand its already huge annual output of 77 million tonnes to 110
million tonnes in the coming years.
The Canada and Qatar developments will significantly boost the around
300 million tonnes of LNG traded per year, helping ease a supply
shortage expected in the next decade amid surging appetite for cleaner
fuels from places such as China and wider Asia.
The projects are seen as just the start, with a host of other approvals
- known as final investment decisions (FIDs) - expected to follow after
waiting in company drawers while LNG prices recovered from a three-year
slump.
"LNG Canada's FID ... (signals) the appetite to invest in LNG is back,"
said Saul Kavonic, an energy researcher at Credit Suisse.
With prices almost tripling from 2016 lows to over $11 per million
British thermal units (mmBtu) as demand gathers steam, the industry has
regained confidence and is preparing to invest in new projects again.
Another 175 million tonnes per year of capacity is expected to be
approved by the end of 2019.
"We believe 2019 could be the busiest year of LNG FIDs ever," said Wood
Mackenzie's director of North America gas, Dulles Wang.
(GRAPHIC: Global LNG demand is rising - https://tmsnrt.rs/2Ot65q9)
LNG WAVE
Forecasts vary, but LNG demand is expected to jump to about 360 million
tonnes by 2023, the International Energy Agency has said, while
consultancy Wood Mackenzie expects 450 tonnes a year.
As well as China, appetite is also expected to grow strongly in South
Asia, where India, Pakistan and Bangladesh are all driving ahead on LNG
import developments.
"If you look at the demand curve and the supply coming on stream, there
are simply not enough (supply) projects that are being sanctioned or
under development to meet demand by 2023-24," Shell's chief financial
officer, Jessica Uhl, said on Tuesday. The firm is the world's biggest
single LNG supplier.
[to top of second column] |
A logo for Royal Dutch Shell Shell is seen on a garage forecourt,
March 6, 2014. REUTERS/Neil Hall/File Photo
But the wave of projects in the pipeline will go some way to crimping any
shortage.
Projects with a total of another 50 million tonnes per year of production
capacity in the United States have already been approved and are expected to
start operations by the end of 2021.
A host of other U.S. companies are also looking to approvals, including for
Tellurian's 27.6 million tonnes Driftwood project.
Other large project approvals on the horizon include Novatek's Arctic LNG-2
project with 19.8 million tonnes capacity, after the Russian gas company's Yamal
export facility started operations smoothly and quickly at the end of last year.
Several projects are also planned in Africa, including two in Mozambique, one
led by Exxon Mobil Corp and the other by Anadarko Petroleum.
In Asia, Exxon expects to expand its large-scale operations in Papua New Guinea,
and there are also plans to extend Australia's huge facilities.
Even with strong demand growth, many analysts warn that not all LNG projects
vying for FID will make it, especially as renewable energy is becoming
increasingly cost-competitive.
Consultancy Deloitte warned during September's Gastech industry gathering that
projects that failed to lower costs to compete with solar plus storage would
likely fail.
Similarly, RBC Capital Markets said "the test for Canada LNG will be whether
Shell can deliver the project on the stated budget, without cost increases and
on time".
RBC said it estimated Canada LNG's "cost breakeven was around $8 per mmBtu".
That's below the long-term average spot LNG price of around $10.5 per mmBtu
since 2010, but only on a par with its 5-year average.
($1 = 1.2821 Canadian dollars)
(Reporting by Sabina Zawadzki and Henning Gloystein; additional reporting by Ron
Bousso in London and Jessica Jaganathan in Singapore; Editing by Dale Hudson and
Joseph Radford)
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