Exclusive: Sinopec to review potential $16 billion U.S.
gas deal with Cheniere - sources
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[January 18, 2020] By
Chen Aizhu
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - China's Sinopec,
expected to be the next major Chinese buyer of U.S. liquefied natural
gas (LNG), is planning to review terms of a potential $16 billion supply
deal with Cheniere Energy Inc after a sharp drop in LNG prices, industry
officials said.
That could delay sign-off on a deal that would help Beijing meet
ambitious targets it set for U.S. energy purchases in a Phase 1 trade
agreement it signed with the United States on Wednesday.
Sinopec, officially named China Petroleum & Chemical Corp, and
Houston-based Cheniere had been expected to sign the 20-year deal once a
trade truce was reached between Beijing and Washington.
However, the LNG market has shifted since news of Sinopec and Cheniere's
negotiations became public early last year. In the intervening period,
the U.S.-China trade war sapped Chinese purchases of U.S. LNG, and
several other gas suppliers, including Qatar, the lowest-cost producer,
decided to build new export plants.
That coming supply would add to an existing glut that has caused gas
prices to collapse to their lowest levels in years and could keep them
suppressed - giving Sinopec additional leverage with Cheniere.
Both companies declined to comment.
A source familiar with the talks said many items needed to be reviewed
as U.S. gas prices have more than halved since 2018.
"Sinopec is talking to several other U.S. suppliers," said a second
source. "It's really not clear at this stage what will come out."
The firm, as one of the few state buyers with appetite to sign new
multi-year LNG supply deals, also needs to lobby Beijing to remove or
rebate a 25% tariff that has made U.S. imports uneconomical in the past
year, one of the sources said.
"(The deal) will be renegotiated... over delivery terms and price," said
an industry executive with knowledge of the matter, who declined to be
named as the matter is not public. "It may not be tough, but will take
time."
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A man stands next to a logo of Sinopec, or China Petroleum and
Chemical Corporation, at an expo on rubber technology in Shanghai,
China September 19, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
LITTLE COMMUNICATION
Sinopec, which plans to more than double its LNG receiving capacities to 41
million tonnes by 2025, emerged last year as China's biggest spot buyer of LNG,
as it is a much smaller purchaser under long-term deals than PetroChina Co Ltd
or China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC).
Those two firms are committed to other long-term contracts, and therefore much
less likely to seek new supply agreements with U.S. exporters. They are also
facing slower domestic demand growth and weaker prices, which have led to losses
in their LNG import business.
State oil firm China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) has already fulfilled its
supply needs through existing deals with Cheniere, and is also anticipating new
supply from investments in the Russian Arctic and Mozambique, said one trading
executive.
The prospect of buying U.S. LNG is even more remote for China's so-called
second-tier independent gas companies, because they have little access to
terminal facilities.
"We'll be in close contact with U.S. suppliers, but price is always the key,"
said Frank Li, assistant to the president of private city gas distributor China
Gas Holdings. "For now Russian pipeline gas is cheaper, Qatari gas is cheaper."
A top state-oil trading executive said his level of management had received no
internal briefing from the government over what products Beijing had in mind
when agreeing the Phase 1 trade deal.
"We're already under steep pressure to absorb high-cost term supplies ... and as
the market is expected to stay over-supplied beyond 2023, why should we sign up
to more term deals?" a CNOOC gas manager said.
(Reporting by Chen Aizhu; additional reporting by Erwin Seba in Houston and
Scott Disavino in New York; Editing by Florence Tan and Jan Harvey)
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