Qatar Targeting 64 Percent Jump in LNG Capacity

Qatar Targeting 64 Percent Jump in LNG Capacity
Qatar will expand its LNG capacity to 126 million tons a year thanks to gas from a newly explored section of the planet's largest field.

(Bloomberg) -- Qatar, the world’s biggest supplier of liquefied natural gas, plans to boost output capacity by almost two thirds after it adds production facilities to exploit recently discovered reserves.

The Persian Gulf state will expand its LNG capacity to 126 million tons a year by 2027, thanks to gas from a newly explored section of the planet’s largest field, Energy Minister Saad Sherida Al Kaabi said at a news briefing in Doha. Qatar can currently produce 77 million tons of LNG annually and expects to raise capacity to 110 million tons by 2024.

Qatar’s massive North Field extends onshore into the area around the industrial city of Ras Laffan, Al Kaabi said on Monday. “Studies and well tests have also confirmed the ability to produce large quantities of gas from this new sector,” he said.

Qatar’s plan for a 64 percent increase in LNG capacity is likely to intensify a global glut in the fuel. The nation is seeking to fend off competition from rival producers such as Australia and the U.S. that have ramped up production and eroded the Gulf state’s historic dominance of the market. Australia has exported about 70 million tons of LNG this year, compared with 71.9 million for Qatar, according to vessel-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg.

The North Field holds more than 1,760 trillion cubic feet of gas, and state-run Qatar Petroleum will “immediately” start engineering work for two additional LNG production plants, or trains, for a combined capacity of 16 million tons annually, Al Kaabi said in a statement. Qatar will be able to produce about 6.7 million barrels of oil equivalent a day by 2027, said Al Kaabi, who also serves as QP’s President and Chief Executive Officer.

The country is also looking to invest in LNG facilities in importing countries, possibly including the U.K., Belgium, and Italy, Al Kaabi said. QP is a partner in the Adriatic LNG terminal near Venice, Italy.

To contact the reporters on this story:
Simone Foxman in Doha at sfoxman4@bloomberg.net;
Verity Ratcliffe in Dubai at vratcliffe1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Nayla Razzouk at nrazzouk2@bloomberg.net



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Rudolf Huber  |  November 29, 2019
That will add to the oversupply. Increasing the pressures in the market. When will LNG producers start to tackle the big prize right in front of them? The fuels market is way bigger than anything global LNG has ever done. It could mop up the surplus with ease. But it will need prodding and that takes folks on the ground. So - will you step up and throw up?


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