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Chinese LNG demand to come back strongly: Woodside

  • Market: Natural gas
  • 27/03/20

Chinese LNG demand will come back strongly over the rest of 2020 following the impact from the coronavirus outbreak in the country, but the demand outlook for the rest of the year for Europe and the US is unclear, said Australian independent Woodside Petroleum.

Woodside's trading team has recently begun placing some spot production back into China as industrial output and demand resumes, Woodside said.

"We are already seeing pollution levels rise again in China, which is an indication that its industry is getting back to work, and we expect LNG demand to come back strongly there," chief executive officer Peter Coleman said today.

Chinese LNG imports still rose in the first two months of 2020 from a year earlier despite the coronavirus outbreak, which forced parts of the country into lockdown at the start of the year.

Woodside is the operator of the 16.3mn t/yr North West Shelf (NWS) LNG venture offshore Western Australia. The project has a 3.3mn t/yr sales and purchase agreement with Chinese state-controlled energy firm CNOOC for its 6.7mn t/yr LNG terminal at Dapeng in south China's Guangdong province, which was signed in 2002 at a sales price of $3.20/mn Btu.

The impact from a fall in the oil price so far this year will not be realised until late in the April-June quarter because of a lag between the oil price and realised LNG price, Woodside said.

The oil price is expected to be volatile at least in the near term, it said. Woodside has hedged 11.85mn bl of oil between April and December 2020 at an average price of $33.47/bl to reduce exposure to potential further downside and increase revenue certainty, it said.

Woodside has also agreed with a European-based energy trader to fix the price of about 2.4mn bl of oil equivalent (boe) or 255,000t of LNG production over the April-December period to further increase revenue certainty, it said.

The LNG demand outlook in Europe and the US is less certain given that both regions are now bearing the brunt of the coronavirus pandemic, Coleman said.

Demand from emerging markets in Asia ex-China is also more difficult to predict because they are made up of a lot of different markets with their own dynamics and given the current port restrictions in place to contain the spread of the coronavirus, which may inhibit trade, he said.

The firm today deferred the sanctioning of its Scarborough gas field offshore Western Australia, with the gas to be used as feedstock for a second train at the 4.3mn t/yr Pluto LNG venture, which is also operated by Woodside.

"Some LNG projects will still go ahead in this low-price environment, and these are the ones that are mainly backed by NOCs [national oil companies]," Coleman said.

Qatari state-owned QP plans to increase LNG capacity by 48mn t/yr to 126mn t/yr by 2027. "The Qataris are already working on increasing production at the North Field and that is unlikely to stop, so we expect them to continue with their expansion plans," Coleman said.

Russia is also looking to expand its LNG capacity to 46mn-65mn t/yr by 2024 and to 70mn-82mn t/yr by 2035 from 18.9mn t in 2018. "It depends on what incentives the Russian government provides to maintain the expansion plans of the LNG projects there," Coleman said.


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28/02/25

Trader curbs US-Canada gas trade on tariff risk

Trader curbs US-Canada gas trade on tariff risk

New York, 28 February (Argus) — A major European energy trading company has redirected about 1 Bcf (28mn m³) of natural gas that was scheduled to flow across the US border into Canada to reduce the company's exposure to the threat of impending tariffs, a person with knowledge of the matter told Argus . The trading company originally planned to flow about 30mn cf/d of gas from the US Midwest into Enbridge's Dawn storage hub in Ontario, Canada, every day in March. But the company has decided to cancel that contract and drop the gas off at another location in Chicago, Illinois, instead, because it did not think the slim profit margin of that trade was worth the risk of having to incur potential tariffs imposed by Canada in retaliation to President Donald Trump's threatened 10pc tariffs on energy products flowing across the border. Trump's tariffs are set to take effect on 4 March. The canceled gas flows across the US-Canadian border illustrate the precautions some industry participants are taking to reduce their exposure to price uncertainty resulting from what appears to be a looming trade war between the close energy trading partners. Such precautions are being taken despite the fact that most analysts think the impact on gas prices and cross-border volumes from Trump's tariffs would be modest. If the tariffs are not imposed and the cross-border trades in March are profitable, the European trading company may choose to resume the trade and send gas from the US into Canada on a daily basis, the person said. Opting out of trades that risk tariff exposure is sometimes the most prudent decision, although it slows dealmaking, the person said. The company is still doing deals that move gas from Canada south into the US Pacific Northwest, because those trades are profitable enough to offset the risk of potential tariffs. By Julian Hast Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Energy a priority for Uruguay’s new government


28/02/25
News
28/02/25

Energy a priority for Uruguay’s new government

Montevideo, 28 February (Argus) — Energy will play a central role as Uruguay's new president Yamandu Orsi begins his five-year term on 1 March. Orsi, of the left-wing Broad Front coalition, takes over one of South America's most economically and politically stable countries. The economy is forecast to expand by 3pc this year, above the regional average, and the government wants to attract investment to maintain growth. The energy sector is a priority. Uruguay already has one of the region's cleanest grids, with 99pc of power coming from renewable sources, and in February reached the goal of 100pc electrification nationwide, according to the state-run electric company, UTE. The Orsi administration is studying options for the second phase of the energy transition, which includes adding capacity to meet increasing demand from electrification of transportation and clean fuel production. New finance minister Gabriel Oddone said the administration would focus on reducing red tape and potentially provide incentives for investment in the energy sector. Uruguay currently has close to 5.3GW of installed capacity, with 78pc in renewable sources, for its population of 3.5mn. The UTE, which had a profit of $315mn in 2024, is adding 100MW in wind power in the next two years. The Orsi administration plans to prioritize solar capacity. The new government is keenly following the development of low-carbon hydrogen and e-fuel projects. The most advanced project is for production of 700,000 tonnes (t) of synthetic fuel by Chile's HIF Global and ALUR, the biofuel arm of the state-owned Ancap. Investment is estimated at $6bn, making it the largest planned single investment in the country's history. The company requested approval in January of environmental permits for the project's solar park that would include 1.84mn bifacial solar panels. It would produce a peak of 1,162MW. Construction would take 18 months from approval. The municipal council in Paysandu, in northwestern Uruguay where the project is planned, on 27 February approved a change in land use to facilitate plant construction. Ancap, which lost an estimated $130mn last year because its only refinery was closed for six months, has proposed offshore production of low-carbon hydrogen. The Orsi administration has not yet committed to the project. Reverse transition? The new government will also have to also have to decide on the future of seven offshore exploration blocks, with seismic testing planned for late this year, and the possible construction of a gas pipeline that would link Argentina and Brazil. A pipeline exists from Argentina to Uruguay, but it could be expanded and extended to supply southern Brazil. It would require an additional 415km (258mi) in Uruguay, and around 500km in Brazil's Rio Grande do Sul state. Orsi has taken a wait-and-see attitude toward exploration, while a gas pipeline would likely have more popular support because it could expand service from only a section of the coast to a wider region. By Lucien Chauvin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Muted Norwegian gas flows in Jan-Feb follow forecast


28/02/25
News
28/02/25

Muted Norwegian gas flows in Jan-Feb follow forecast

London, 28 February (Argus) — Nominated flows to Europe from Norway have held below 2024 so far this year, but this decline is roughly in line with the Norwegian Offshore Directorate's (NOD) revised forecast for gas output. Nominated Norwegian flows to Europe, including the UK, averaged 327.5mn m³/d on 1 January-27 February, down by 4pc from 340.4mn m³/d a year earlier ( see flows graph ), data from Norwegian offshore system operator Gassco show. But nominated deliveries from the Norwegian continental shelf (NCS) to Europe were particularly high in January last year at 348.2mn m³/d — the second-highest for any month since January 2017. Norwegian flows to Europe held in a range of 295-318.2mn m³/d per year in 2021-23 and averaged 317.4mn m³/d across last year. But factoring out May and September last year, when maintenance on the shelf was the heaviest, average flows were 329.5mn m³/d. Unplanned maintenance has cut into exports On top of already scheduled works, unplanned maintenance has cut into production availability at several Norwegian fields so far this year. Average capacity cuts at Norwegian fields were 11.9mn m³/d in January and 6mn m³/d on 1-27 February, the latest Gassco data show. This is up on the year from capacity reductions of 4.2mn m³/d and 5.6mn m³/d for the respective periods. Gassco's schedule of works does not include capacity restrictions of less than 5mn m³. And past and scheduled Remit messages on the Gassco website include maintenance at 21 producing fields, but there are "currently above 65 producing units delivering into system", the operator has said. Norwegian exports to Europe can also be limited by works at processing plants, although this impact is difficult to assess as production from some fields can be processed at more than one processing plant,is processed at the field or at a receiving terminal. As such, available Norwegian export capacity can at times be lower than works at fields suggest. Nominated flows to Europe peaked at 360.3mn m³ on 19 December 2023 in recent years, even though technical capacity of export infrastructure is higher. Taking this figure as maximum export capacity to Europe, there has been a gap between actual and potential flows in recent months ( see actual versus potential flows graph ). NOD revised down forecast gas output for 2025 The NOD forecast that gas output on the NCS will fall faster on the year in 2025 than previously projected. The NOD forecast NCS gas production to fall this year from 2024 by 5pc to 118.45bn m³ or 324.5mn m³/d this year, according to data published on 20 February. This is a downward revision from its previous projection of 120.4bn m³ or 329.7mn m³/d. This would correspond to a year-on-year decline of 3pc from 2024. The forecast decline in output may have contributed to the drop in exports so far this year, although there is no confirmed production data yet available. The NOD forecast does not factor in commercial flexibility, where firms producing on the shelf may defer some production volumes in reaction to market conditions. In particular, production at the giant Troll field and fields in the Oseberg area, which account for a significant share of overall NCS production, are important flexible assets. Troll produced 119.5mn m³/d and Oseberg fields 24.2mn m³/d last year. While the shape of the TTF forward-price curve has changed in recent days as TTF prompt prices have fallen more than contracts further out along the curve, there remains an incentive to maximise production now looking longer term ( see price graph ), suggesting limited scope for production deferrals. In addition, forecasts by the NOD are likely based on the schedule of works at the time of modelling, but further gas works are often added over time and unplanned outages can occur, as has been the case so far this year. Maintenance at Norwegian fields is scheduled to be significantly lighter in March-December than in the period last year. Capacity cuts at the fields were scheduled as of today to be 14mn m³/d over the next 10 months, peaking at 48.6mn m³/d in September. This is down from realised capacity cuts of 29.7mn m³/d in March-December last year and a peak of 111.9mn m³/d in September 2024. In any event, the 4pc on-the-year decline so far this year is not far from the forecast decrease of 5pc. LNG could fill in for lower Norwegian exports LNG deliveries might need to step up this year to fill in for lower Norwegian exports to Europe. Given the expected reduction of NCS gas output of 5.79bn m³ this year from 2024, assuming an average LNG vessel size at 174,000m³ and accounting for boil-off and heel — LNG which remains in the vessel when unloading — Europe would need an additional 61 LNG cargoes this year to substitute the drop in Norwegian pipeline deliveries. And given the halt in Ukrainian transit of Russian gas at the start of the year, combined with continental storage stocks at a multi-year low approaching the end of the winter, it is likely Europe will need to attract even more LNG cargoes to comply with EU-mandated storage filling targets for 1 November. By Jana Cervinkova Norwegian nominated flows to Europe from Jan '21 until 1-27 Feb '25 mn m³/d Actual nominated vs potential daily Norwegian exports to Europe mn m³ Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Japanese utility Tepco faces nuclear restart delay


27/02/25
News
27/02/25

Japanese utility Tepco faces nuclear restart delay

Osaka, 27 February (Argus) — Japanese utility Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) is facing a possible further delay in restarting its Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant in Niigata prefecture, as the company is likely to miss a deadline for installing anti-terrorism facilities at the No.7 and No.6 reactors. Under Japanese nuclear safety regulations, nuclear power plant operators are required to build emergency control facilities in the event of severe accidents such as an aircraft crash or terrorist attack, within five years of receiving approvals to upgrade a reactor. Operators that miss the deadline will have to shut down their reactors. Tepco said on 27 February that it has revised its target date to complete the counter-terrorism measures at the 1,356MW Kashiwazaki-Kariwa No.7 reactor from March 2025 to August 2029, after reviewing the upgrade construction process. This means that Tepco will not be able to meet its October 2025 deadline. This will force the reactor to shut for an extended period to complete the reinforcement work, even if Tepco secures local government approval to restart and successfully resumes operations before the deadline. Tepco has also extended a target date to complete the counter-terrorism measures at the 1,356MW Kashiwazaki-Kariwa No.6 reactor from September 2026 to September 2031, later than the September 2029 deadline. The Kashiwazaki-Kariwa No.7 and No.6 reactors have been closed since August 2011 and March 2012 respectively, following the March 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster. The reactors have already cleared the post-Fukushima stricter safety inspection by the Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA), but still need to secure local approval as the final hurdle. Niigata governor Hideyo Hanazumi has been cautious about whether to approve the restoration of the Kashiwazaki-Karaiwa nuclear plant because of safety concerns, reiterating he will prioritise the concerns of local residents. Tepco has tried to restart the No.7 reactor first, while completing the loading of nuclear fuel into the reactor in April 2024. But given that the October 2025 deadline for the No.7 reactor is looming, the company may refocus on restoring the No.6 reactor to utilise it until its safety deadline of September 2029. Tepco plans to load nuclear fuel into the No.6 reactor on 10 June. The possible return of the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant will symbolic of Tepco's progress, given it has scrapped the melted-down Fukushima Daiichi and its nearby Fukushima Daini nuclear plants. Kashiwazaki-Kariwa is now Tepco's sole nuclear plant, and its return is expected to help ease the risk of an electricity shortage like the one that occurred in January 2021 in the Tokyo metropolitan area. Tepco estimates that the restart of one nuclear reactor, which can produce 10TWh/yr of electricity, will help boost the company's profits by around ¥100bn ($668mn). It also expects the return of the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa No.7 reactor will help reduce CO2 emissions by around 3.3mn t/yr. By Motoko Hasegawa Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Malaysia’s Petronas reports higher gas output in 2024


27/02/25
News
27/02/25

Malaysia’s Petronas reports higher gas output in 2024

Singapore, 27 February (Argus) — Malaysia's state-owned Petronas reported higher gas output in 2024, but its oil production fell. It also posted a significant drop in profit, resulting from lower average realised prices and divestments. Petronas' total oil and gas production amounted to 2.4mn b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d) in 2024, up by 1pc on the year. Of this, oil production fell by 4.4pc on the year to 813,000 boe/d, while gas output rose by 3.6pc to 1.64mn boe/d. The rise in gas production was attributed to the firm's attempts to maximise output from domestic and international operations. Petronas achieved first hydrocarbon production for 21 projects in Malaysia and Indonesia in 2024, and signed 14 production sharing contracts during the year. It expanded its presence in the UAE with its third concession in Abu Dhabi — the 7,300km² onshore block 2, for which it holds 100pc equity and will assume operatorship during the exploration period. The firm's oil product sales fell by 16pc on the year to 247.8mn bl in 2024, while its LNG sales rose by 9pc to 35.7mn t. Its petrochemical product sales rose by 7pc to 10.1mn t. The firm's revenue fell by 7pc on the year to 320bn ringgit ($72.2bn), partly because of lower average realised prices, said Petronas. Its 2024 revenue also only included five months of South African oil firm Engen's financial results, until the divestment of its 74pc share in the company in May 2024. In line with the fall in revenue, the firm's profit after tax fell by 32pc to 55.1bn ringgit. The divestment of Engen also meant an unfavourable realisation of the firm's foreign currency translation reserve, said Petronas. Petronas' capital expenditure (capex) rose by 3pc on the year to 54.2bn ringgit. About half of its capex went to its upstream business, with investments mainly in the Kasawari gas field development and the integrated Bekok oil development. Over 70pc of the group's costs were attributable to domestic activities, said Petronas. The firm also allocated over 6bn ringgit of capex toward cleaner energy solutions, mainly in renewables, hydrogen and carbon capture and storage. The firm's Scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas emissions totalled 46.04mn t of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) across its Malaysian operations in 2024, surpassing its target of 49.5mn t of CO2e for the year. In comparison, the firm recorded 45.6mn t of Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions last year. By Prethika Nair Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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