Gas Import Options Expanding for China
China is poised to become the top global liquefied natural gas importer this year, by-passing current leader Japan, according to a new Wood Mackenzie report.
At 11 million tonnes, China will account for more than half of the 18 million tonnes of increased global LNG demand forecasted for the entire year, the report said.
Due to strong economic recovery over last year’s Covid-led economic contraction, China has largely been the main driver of the ongoing Asian LNG spot market price surge year to date.
Prices for the super-cooled fuel during the first week in July hit seasonal record highs above US$14 per million British thermal units (MMBtu).
Increased demand has also come from legacy LNG buyers Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan as they refill inventory levels earlier than usual after a cold winter which saw spot prices breach the US$30/MMBtu price point in January – a new record. Prices have also been supported by increased power demand in North Asia due to warmer seasonal temperatures and increased air conditioner usage.
The price run-up has been a boon for LNG markets which suffered from record demand destruction last year due to the pandemic. Spot prices for the fuel dipped beneath US$2/MMBtu by April 2020 – well below the breakeven point for most producers.
China’s increased LNG procurement also comes as it continues to turn to natural gas to meet a government mandate that the cleaner-burning fuel account for as much as 15% of its energy mix by 2030, with further earmarks after that. Gas will also help Beijing reach its goal of net-zero carbon emissions by 2060 and its efforts to cap emissions by 2030.
Making hard choices
However, with spot prices for LNG now at multi-year seasonal highs, China could turn to more pipeline gas from neighbouring Russia – particularly the 38 billion cubic metre (Bcm) per year Power of Siberia 1 (PoS1) gas pipeline.
The country first started importing gas from PoS1 in December 2019, and a second Siberian gas pipeline is nearing completion.
LNG has been the most competitive gas import option into China for the past two years, Wood Mackenzie added, but rising prices have now brought this competitive advantage to an end. As such, LNG could remain a cost-disadvantaged supply option versus gas pipeline imports over the next several years – a reversal of gas pricing dynamics that could shake up markets even further.
City gas distributors impacted
High LNG prices are impacting several Chinese city gas distributors who already operate on thin profit margins as well as prompting gas-fired power plants in the southern part of the country to lower their utilisation rates and review their exposure to the short-term LNG market.
Commodities data provider S&P Global Platts also pointed to continued problems for Chinese city gas distributors, particularly as prices touch levels which many plant operators cannot afford.
China had already been increasing Russian pipeline gas imports before the recent spike in LNG spot prices, taking in some1.67 Bcm of the fuel during the first half of the year, Chinese customs data shows. China’s LNG imports from Russia, for its part, totalled 2.04 million tonnes over the same period, with most of those volumes coming from Russia’s Yamal LNG production facility.
However, given that China’s LNG procurement with Russia is mostly via long-term contracts, increased pipeline imports are likely to have a negligible impact on its contracted LNG agreements with Russian suppliers.
Russian piped gas is currently the lowest-cost import option at the Chinese border, with continued strong growth in Russian gas as cost-competitive supply increases and domestic pipelines expand, Wood Mackenzie noted. “But this still won’t be enough to meet anticipated demand, and China requires significant further imported LNG to sustain domestic demand growth,” the consultancy added.
Any respite for European markets, however, which already competes with the Asia-Pacific region for LNG volumes, will not materialize, especially amid strong Chinese demand for the fuel.
Dutch Title Transfer Facility (TTF) natural gas prices, the main European benchmark, breached the $12/MMBtu price point – a 12-year high – on the 1st July. However, producers and traders are still diverting LNG cargoes away from Europe to the Asia-Pacific region to take advantage of arbitrage opportunities.
Source: Rigzone