An uncomfortable prospect for global exporters of liquefied natural gas (LNG) will unfold in India this week — buyers from countries that import 70% of the world’s LNG will meet to discuss how to get a better deal.
Economic expansion, nuclear plant shutdowns in Japan and South Korea and the shift toward cleaner-burning gas in smog-choked Chinese cities have contributed to rising demand for LNG in Asia, already the top destination for the fuel.
Demand has helped push LNG prices to near record levels. Trying to find ways to cut soaring gas import bills, industry participants from India, Japan, South Korea, China and Taiwan will meet in New Delhi on Dec. 5-6, said B.C. Tripathi, chairman of GAIL (India), India’s biggest gas pipeline operator.
The meetings may herald the early stages of an Asian buyers’ club for natural gas in supercooled form transported on ships. Should such a grouping gain traction, a historical precedent would be the formation of the International Energy Agency, which was set up by western economies to counter OPEC after the first oil shock in the 1970s.
A buyers’ group could counter the Gas Exporting Countries Forum, a loose group of 13 gas-producing nations, including Algeria, Iran, Nigeria, Oman, Qatar and Russia.
“It has been observed in some recent deals that prices offered by the same seller to Europe and Asia vary greatly, beyond net back and business considerations,” said Indian Oil Minister S. Veerappa Moily.
“Large Asian buyers coming together may negotiate from a position of strength,” Moily said.
Asian importers say they are charged an excessive premium to other regions because of the tradition of linking LNG contracts to oil prices. A free market in the fuel is constrained by contractual restrictions on ship destinations.
“This is a forum exclusively for buying countries so that we collectively have a voice in the international market,” Tripathi said, speaking at another gas conference that ends on Wednesday.
Tripathi said the meeting later this week was the second for buyers from the five countries that together accounted for nearly 70 percent of LNG shipments in 2012, according to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy.
Spot LNG prices are currently at about $18.95 per million British thermal units (mmBtu) and are closing in on last winter’s peak of $19.67, hit on Feb. 18. They have risen over a third from this year’s low of $14.13 in May.
In the United States, where surging shale gas production has pushed down prices, natural gas trades at about $3.80 per mmBtu, but the price doesn’t account for the cost of cooling the fuel to liquid form and shipping it overseas.
Most LNG is bought on long-term contract and it is the cost of these supplies that Asian buyers are trying to reduce. They also want to delink contracts from oil prices and eliminate the clauses that restrict the destination of shipments and prevent them from selling on excess cargoes.
Buyers tend to turn to the spot market as their demand fluctuates or contracted supplies are cut off due to maintenance or other outages at LNG facilities.
Asian buyers are betting on LNG shipments from the U.S., which has started relaxing restrictions on gas exports, to force prices down.
“Export of natural gas from America can act as a catalyst for change,” IEA head Maria van der Hoeven told the gas conference in New Delhi on Tuesday.
SURGING DEMAND
Across the region, demand for LNG is rising, while new, uncontracted sources of supply aren’t likely until at least the end of the decade.
In Japan, which buys about a third of global LNG shipments, all nuclear reactors have been shut down following the Fukushima nuclear disaster of 2011. While there may be a slight decline in imports this year, they are set to rise again over the next few years as more gas-fired capacity comes online.
In South Korea, a quarter of the nation’s nuclear reactors have been shut mostly due to a corruption scandal that started in 2012, pushing LNG imports 13 percent higher in the first 10 months of this year.
Potential shortages of piped gas in China have also pushed up demand for LNG there, while India’s need is to cut imported fuel costs as the rupee has plunged this year.
Indian and Japanese officials have been among the most vocal in the push to cut prices. At an LNG producers’ and consumers’ conference in Tokyo in September, the two countries announced they would study joint purchases of the fuel.
So far they’ve been rebuffed by LNG producers, who argue long-term contracts ensure the reliability of supplies in a high risk business.
“Every utility has its own requirements for LNG and how do you share the risks associated with taking on that length of contract?” said one LNG trade source. “Nobody’s ever approached us (as a consortium). As far as I know, it’s all ideas at the moment.”
Among regional buyers not many said they were sending representatives to the meeting. Japanese trading house Mitsui & Co said it was sending India-based representatives to the meeting.
Tokyo Electric Power Co and Tokyo Gas Co, two of Japan’s biggest LNG buyers, said they weren’t sending representatives to New Delhi.
“Among buyers, there have been talks to make efforts to narrow the price gaps (between regions) and reduce premiums,” said a source at Korea Gas Corp. “However, as there have been no concrete steps yet, we haven’t participated in the talks nor suggested ideas.”
The formation of a buyers’ forum, if it occurs at all, will take time, said one Chinese buyer.
“Maybe slowly there will be some sort of cooperation but so far we haven’t seen any material working together,” said an LNG procurement official at China’s Sinopec.
© Thomson Reuters 2013