WoodMac: FLNG industry growth facing headwind

Floating liquefied natural gas industry is expected to continue its growth in the future, however, it will be at a slower steadier pace of growth is likely as FLNG competes for capital and buyers in a busy LNG market.

 

According to the research and consultancy group Wood Mackenzie, the FLNG sector still faces numerous challenges.

 

Governments are concerned by the transfer of jobs to foreign shipyards during construction and to offshore workers during operation, which led to a push for onshore developments, such as Abadi (Indonesia), Greater Sunrise (Timor Leste/Australia) and Tanzania, WoodMac said.

 

Furthermore, the significant reduction in exploration expenditure since the oil price crash in 2014 has yielded few suitable new gas discoveries. The FID trend in the LNG industry more recently has favoured high capacity US onshore projects with lower capital and operating costs.

 

FLNG projects face difficulties obtaining both the necessary partners, buyers and financing against such high capacity projects, Wood Mackenzie said.

 

A strong forerunner for FID, Ophir-led Fortuna FLNG appears to be out of luck, time and investors in the project. Prospective North American FLNG projects such as Delfin FLNG are struggling to attain the same interest as onshore projects despite the use of low-cost liquefaction vessels.

 

The lack of economy of scale is likely to limit FLNG projects to small scale and remote developments. This often requires the FLNG facility to be integrated with the upstream section of the project, resulting in projects of increasing complexity and cost, WoodMac notes.

 

The consultancy expects this trend to continue with high capacity projects in the US, Russia, Qatar and Mozambique looking to take FID.

 

The lack of economy of scale is likely to limit FLNG projects to small scale and remote developments as it competes for buyers, financing and partners in a busy LNG marketplace.

 

However, FLNG has established itself as a credible development option and – with further experience and cost reduction – further projects may quickly appear in an otherwise quiet FLNG FID outlook.

 

In addition, the learnings of floating are being incorporated into a new development concept – platform based liquefaction as being looked by a number of projects.

 

Source: OGLinks