The world's top producers of LNG are investing in ship-fuelling operations, floating import terminals and power plants to open new markets and keep from drowning in a fuel surplus expected to last into the next decade.
Companies such as Royal Dutch Shell Plc (NYSE: RDS.A), Total and Malaysia's Petroliam Nasional Bhd are scrambling to create demand as cheap coal and cleaner wind and solar power threaten to curb growth in the 250 million tonnes-per year LNG market.
LNG suppliers have been put in a tough spot as demand from the world's top importers of the past few decades, Japan and South Korea, has declined due to slowing economies, more efficient use of power and switches to coal and renewables.
Using LNG, employed now mostly in power generation, as a fuel for transport is one of the industry's biggest hopes.
"If we can secure only 10 percent of the heavy transport market, you're talking about 70 million tonnes [a year] extra demand. That's almost as much as Japan," Shell's integrated gas director, Maarten Wetselaar, told reporters at a conference in Perth, Australia, this week.
Shell recently signed a deal to supply LNG to Carnival Corp., the world's biggest cruise operator, and sees huge potential to fuel ships, trucks and buses, which it says use the equivalent of 700 million tonnes of LNG a year in oil products.
Australia's Woodside Petroleum also took a small step this week to grow LNG demand in transport, buying an LNG-fueled supply vessel that could be a seed for developing LNG as a shipping fuel in Australia. Woodside is also eyeing road transport markets, such as for trucking.
Floating Terminals
It was against the backdrop of a vast surplus, stalled demand and weak prices that Woodside scrapped its plans for the $30 billion Browse floating liquefaction plant off Western Australia.
LNG imports by Japan and South Korea fell last year by 7 million tonnes, offsetting growth in the rest of Asia and leading to the region's first annual drop in demand since 2009, the International Gas Union (IGU) said in a report this week.
Over the past two years supply growth and shrinking demand has pulled spot LNG prices in Asia down 80% to just above $4 per million British thermal units.
"It appears unlikely that demand in this region will fully recover in the near term," the IGU said.
To help develop markets, Woodside's CEO, Peter Coleman, said his company is willing to co-invest in floating storage and regasification units, which can cost less than $100 million and be developed quickly. Compared with Woodside's canceled Browse investment, that would be a tiny commitment.
The lower cost is an equally important factor for less developed countries that do not have the demand or cash for the enormous projects of the past, making small-scale LNG projects key to the spread of the fuel.
Egypt, Jordan and Pakistan started importing LNG at floating terminals last year. And in 2016, another 12.3 million tonnes a year in import capacity will be added by new floating terminals in Colombia, Ghana and Puerto Rico.
Malaysia's Petronas also sees opportunities to co-invest in import terminals in Thailand, Myanmar, Bangladesh and Vietnam, Ahmad Adly Alias, its head of LNG trading and marketing, said.
French oil and gas giant Total is trying a slightly different approach, tying up with major importer Korea Gas Corp. to develop new markets, and working with Indonesia's Pertamina to build an import terminal and pipe gas to an independent power project (IPP).
"We are not a fan of investing in an IPP, but if we need to create demand, why not?" Total's CEO, Patrick Pouyanne, told reporters at the conference.
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