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NorthAmOil                                    COMMENTARY                                          NorthAmOil




       Baker Hughes raises projection





       for LNG demand







       Oilfield services firm Baker Hughes said in its first-quarter earnings call that it

       has raised its expectations for global LNG demand to 600-650mn tpy by 2030



        GLOBAL           OILFIELD services firm Baker Hughes has an  Supply expectations
                         increasingly bullish outlook for the global LNG  If demand expands as anticipated by Baker
       WHAT:             industry, as well as natural gas more broadly. On  Hughes, this will also make room for more sup-
       Baker Hughes has raised   the company’s first-quarter earnings call, Baker  ply to come online. New liquefaction capacity is
       its global LNG demand   Hughes’ chairman and CEO, Lorenzo Simonelli,  already under construction in countries includ-
       forecast to 600-650mn   said the energy transition was expected to bolster  ing Qatar, Russia and the US, in addition to
       tpy by 2030.      future demand for the super-chilled fuel.  which, a number of proposals are on the table
                           In line with these expectations, Baker Hughes  but have not yet reached the final investment
       WHY:              has revised projections for future demand  decision (FID) stage.
       The company expects   upwards. The company now anticipates that   Under its updated outlook, Baker Hughes
       the energy transition to   global demand for LNG has the potential to  anticipates that 3-4 liquefaction projects will
       bolster LNG demand.  reach 600-650mn tonnes per year by 2030, up  reach FID in 2021, which will be followed by a
                         from its previous projection of 550-600mn tpy.  “strong pipeline of opportunities in 2022 and
       WHAT NEXT:          This outlook is based on recent third-party  beyond”, according to Simonelli. In response
       Under its updated   analysis and supported by discussions with  to an analyst question, he also said there were
       outlook, Baker Hughes   some of Baker Hughes’ customers, according  a lot of offtake discussions underway currently
       anticipates 3-4   to Simonelli. He also cited a “resilient” 2020 for  based on what his company has heard from its
       liquefaction projects   natural gas and LNG, despite the short-term  customers.
       reaching FID in 2021.  impact of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pan-  This outlook is more bullish than some of
                         demic on demand.                     the expectations of others. Consultancy Wood
                           “The resilience of demand during the pan-  Mackenzie, for example, said last month that
                         demic combined with the acceleration of cli-  it anticipated few new LNG FIDs over the next
                         mate commitments has resulted in improving  two years, though it warned of a supply gap of
                         optimism over the demand outlook,” Simonelli  50mn tpy by 2030 that it expects to widen fur-
                         said. “This has also been reflected in our con-  ther still to over 170mn tpy by 2035.
                         versations with customers. As more nations,   Baker Hughes, meanwhile, expects more
                         such as China, make net-zero commitments, it  FIDs in both the short and longer term.
                         is becoming increasingly clear that a phase-out   “As you look at getting to 600-650mn tonnes
                         of coal in favour of natural gas is necessary to  by the end of the decade from a demand per-
                         reach their goals, as well as broader global car-  spective, that means we’ve got to have approx-
                         bon targets.”                        imately 700-800mn tonnes of nameplate


























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