Asian LNG Prices Expected to Sink as Low as $4 in 'Ugly' Market - bloomberg.com
  he slump in liquefied natural gas prices still has further to go,  even after a plunge of 60 percent from last year’s peak, according to  FGE, an energy consultant.LNG prices may sink as low as $4 per  million British thermal units by 2017 because of a glut and probably  won’t rise above $8 before 2020, FGE Chairman Fereidun Fesharaki said in  a phone interview. That compares with the latest spot price of $7.10  for LNG shipped to northeast Asia, according to New York-based Energy  Intelligence Group.
  “It’s an ugly environment,” Fesharaki said, "at least for LNG producers."
  While the International Energy Agency four years ago  envisioned  the possibility of a golden age of gas, Japan’s return to nuclear power  after the 2011 Fukushima disaster and cheaper alternatives are  threatening demand. LNG producers, meanwhile, are forecast to add 50  million metric tons of new capacity next year, the largest single annual  increase and equivalent to a fifth of current global demand, according  to Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.
  The bulk of the new supply is coming from Australia, where companies including ConocoPhillips, Origin Energy Ltd.,  Chevron Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell are spending more than $150 billion  on export ventures. Most LNG projects have long-term contracts with  customers linked to the price of crude oil, which has slumped about 50  percent in the past year.
  Spot LNG prices in Asia have declined for  six straight weeks with buyers “on the sidelines,” and have now slumped  more than 60 percent from a record $19.70 in February 2014, according to  Energy Intelligence Group. LNG projects condense gas into liquid form  at about minus 160 degrees Celsius (minus 256 Fahrenheit) so it can be  shipped to overseas markets.
  “But as we go forward, the outlook  looks better and better in the early 2020s,” said Fesharaki, whose firm  advises big oil companies and banks. “The challenge is to persuade your  board to go forward and put the money up. Nobody wants to spend that  kind of money in this environment.”
  Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd.  said in July LNG prices could fall as low as $7 over the next six months  due to weaker demand in Japan and South Korea before stabilizing in a  range of about $8 to $10. |