Booming Asian Gas Demand Ripples All the Way to Norway
(Bloomberg) -- Asia’s rapacious thirst for liquefied natural gas is sucking supplies from surprising places.
China to Japan and South Korea are paying top dollar for the super-chilled fuel. The pull is so strong that Norway’s Statoil ASA, which usually exports most of its LNG to Europe, is shipping a rare cargo east. It plans to send more.
Asia gets most of its LNG from Australia, including from the giant Gorgon project on the country’s northwest coast. Malaysia, Papua New Guinea and Indonesia are also big suppliers.
Statoil’s tanker, the Arctic Aurora, due in South Korea this week shows how the LNG market is becoming global, with more cargoes traveling long distances from the Atlantic to the Pacific region as China leads a landmark shift to burning gas instead of coal. For Statoil, it’s a chance to squeeze a little more profit from its overall gas production that’s already near full capacity.
“What we’ve seen in Asia is strong prices,” said Peder Bjorland, Statoil’s head of natural gas. But “it doesn’t help to have strong prices if you don’t have the shipping capacity. It’s been difficult to get hold of spot vessels.”
The producer has in the past sent cargoes to Malaysia, China, India and Japan, but it mainly serves the markets in Europe and the Americas.
As well as shipping its own production from its Arctic plant, which produces about 40 cargoes a year, Statoil buys and sells LNG in the market. It traded about nine cargoes in each of past two years and has plans to handle more.
“We do third-party trading mainly to optimize our activities around equity volumes from our liquefaction plant in Norway, and to generate additional margins,” Bjorland said.
Norway, Europe’s second-biggest natural gas supplier after Russia, was last year preparing for a price drop in the region as a long-expected flood of new liquefied natural gas finally arrives. This is now less likely because of surging demand in Asia.
Rising transport costs can reduce the arbitrage gains from sending cargoes to Asia and can even exceed the price differential between Europe and Asia. With available shipping increasingly scarce, tapping those profits hasn’t been that easy, he said.
Still, Asian demand is driving market rates higher and global prices are set to become more correlated, he said.
“We have a positive view on gas prices.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Mathew Carr in London at m.carr@bloomberg.net; Anna Shiryaevskaya in London at ashiryaevska@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Reed Landberg at landberg@bloomberg.net Andrew Reierson.
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