Global demand for LNG grows by 12.5% in 2019

EPA-EFE/YONHAP
The Malaysia-registered LNG tanker Serry Sandrawash receives LNG for power generation at an LNG base in Incheon, west of Seoul, South Korea, 08 October 2019.

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Global demand for liquefied natural gas (LNG) grew by 12.5% to 359 million tonnes in 2019, according to Shell’s latest annual LNG Outlook published on 20 February.
This a significant increase that bolsters LNG’s growing role in the transition to a lower-carbon energy system, Shell said in a press release.
Last year, there were key developments that are helping to reshape the industry: an industry record of 40 million tonnes of additional supply becoming available and being consumed by the market; the belief in long-term demand growth triggering record investment decisions in liquefaction capacity of 71 million tonnes; an increase in diversity of contractual structures, providing a wider range of options to LNG buyers; the growing role of gas in improving air quality through coal-to-gas switching in the power and industrial sectors, with coal generation phase-out announcements more than trebling, Shell said.
Natural gas emits between 45 and 55% fewer greenhouse gas emissions and less than one-tenth of the air pollutants than coal when used to generate electricity.
“The global LNG market continued to evolve in 2019 with demand increasing for LNG and natural gas in power and non-power sectors,” Shell Integrated Gas and New Energies Director Maarten Wetselaar said. “Record supply investments will meet people’s growing need for the most flexible and cleanest-burning fossil fuel.”
“While we see weak market conditions today due to record new supply coming in, two successive mild winters and the Coronavirus situation, we expect equilibrium to return, driven by a combination of continued demand growth and reduction in new supply coming on-stream until the mid-2020s,” Wetselaar said.
According to the Shell Outlook, Europe absorbed the majority of 2019 supply growth as competitively-priced LNG furthered coal-to-gas switching in the power sector and replaced declining domestic gas production and pipeline gas imports.
New spot-trading mechanisms and a wider variety of indices used for long-term contracts point towards LNG becoming an increasingly flexible commodity.
There was a modest rise in imports to Asia in 2019, compared to the previous two years, a result of mild weather and rising electricity generation from nuclear power in Japan and South Korea, two of the three largest global importers, Shell said.
In China, LNG imports increased by 14% in 2019 as efforts continued to improve urban air quality. Also notable was LNG demand growth in South Asia. In total, Bangladesh, India and Pakistan imported 36 million tonnes, an increase of 19% over last year, pointing to emerging growth countries in Asia, the Shell Outlook said.
Over the longer-term, global LNG demand is expected to double to 700 million tonnes by 2040, according to forecasts, as gas plays a significant role in shaping a lower-carbon energy system. Asia is expected to remain the dominant region in the decades to come, with South and South-east Asia generating more than half of the increased demand.
 

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Co-founder / Director of Energy & Climate Policy and Security at NE Global Media

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