Page 6 - MEOG Week 09
P. 6

MEOG                                          COMMENTARY                                               MEOG




       Qatari deals come amid





       push for LNG dominance






       Two separate LNG-related deals were announced last week,
       involving Qatargas and its parent company, Qatar Petroleum.




        QATAR            TWO separate LNG-related deals have been  condensate, liquefied petroleum gas (LPG),
                         announced last week, involving Qatargas and its  ethane, sulphur and helium.
                         parent company, Qatar Petroleum (QP).  Its combined output will be 1.4mn barrels
       WHAT:               On February 22, Italy’s Saipem said it had  of oil equivalent per day (boepd). The project
       Two separate LNG-related   received a contract worth around $1.7bn from  is anticipated to begin production in the fourth
       deals involving state-  Qatargas for engineering, procurement, con-  quarter of 2025, ramping up to full capacity by
       owned Qatari firms have   struction and installation (EPCI) of various  late 2026 or early 2027, and QP has estimated
       been announced.   offshore facilities at Qatar’s North Field. The  the expansion’s total cost at $28.75bn. Wood
                         facilities, for the extraction and transportation  Mackenzie has suggested that this is likely to be
       WHY:              of natural gas, will be installed as part of Qatar’s  the largest project sanctioned across the global
       Qatar is on a push to   project to expand its LNG production capacity to  upstream sector this year.
       maintain and expand its   110mn tonnes per year from 77mn tpy currently.  In addition to the offshore EPCI contract,
       LNG dominance.      Separately, QP has struck a long-term deal  Saipem appears to be set to be awarded another.
                         to supply 1.25mn tpy of LNG to commodity  The Italian company said it had received a letter
       WHAT NEXT:        trader Vitol for delivery to the latter’s customers  of intent (LoI) from Qatargas covering the con-
       The country’s NFE project   in Bangladesh. Deliveries are set to begin later  tractual package for offshore export pipelines
       to expand LNG capacity is   this year, from Qatar’s existing LNG production.  and related onshore work for the North Field
       expected to enter service   This comes as Bangladesh is facing growing  expansion project. The award is subject to the
       by the end of 2025.  demand for gas from various sectors, including  finalisation of contractual details and Qatargas’
                         industry, power plants and fertiliser plants.  final approval.
                         Capacity push                        Bangladeshi deal
                         Both deals follow QP’s final investment decision  In the meantime, QP continues its efforts to con-
                         (FID) on its North Field East (NFE) expansion  tract out current and future LNG production, as
                         project, announced earlier this month.  illustrated by the Bangladesh deal it struck with
                           At the same time, the company awarded the  Vitol.
                         onshore EPC contract for the four LNG mega-  Qatar has touted the low cost of its LNG, and
                         trains included in the scheme to a joint venture  says that the NFE expansion would be “the most
                         between Chiyoda and Technip Energies. The  competitive LNG project in the world”. Even
                         expansion is the largest single LNG project  ahead of output from the expansion entering the
                         ever to be sanctioned, according to consultancy  market, though, the country has shown a will-
                         Wood Mackenzie. Another consultancy, Rystad  ingness to offer LNG offtake at low prices, in the
                         Energy, has said the expansion puts Qatar on  hopes that this will give it a competitive edge in
                         track to return as the world’s largest LNG pro-  the global market.
                         ducer by 2030, having recently been edged out by   In September 2020, Qatargas won a 10-year
                         Australia. When Qatar reaches full LNG produc-  tender to supply China’s Sinopec with 1mn tpy of
                         tion capacity of 110mn tpy, Rystad estimates this  LNG from 2020. Media at the time cited sources
                         will account for 18% of the global total, which it  familiar with the matter as saying Sinopec had
                         currently puts at 600mn tpy by 2030. However,  agreed to pay at a slope of 10.00-10.19% to Brent
                         additional capacity could be sanctioned early  crude. Market intelligence firm ICIS compared
                         this decade that would come online by then, and  this to historic LNG contracts that were typically
                         the consultancy has also noted that utilisation  agreed at slopes of 14-15%, noting the downward
                         rates do not necessarily match capacity. Indeed,  pressure on LNG prices that was particularly
                         it expects Qatar’s actual production in 2030 to  evident last year. Only a handful of LNG supply
                         reach 107mn tpy, though this would be a higher  deals have been reported at lower levels than the
                         utilisation rate than it anticipates by that year  Qatargas-Sinopec deal, according to ICIS.
                         from the US, with 91%, or Australia, with 86%.  Separately, Qatar has been preparing to ramp
                           Aside from gas for liquefaction, the upstream  up shipments to the UK – where it is already the
                         component of the NFE project will produce  largest supplier of LNG by far. In October, QP



       P6                                       www. NEWSBASE .com                         Week 09   03•March•2021
   1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11