Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on July 22, 2007

Bookmark and Share

Russia and liquefied natural gas

The recent history of natural gas has been dominated by pipeline economics and pipeline politics and this history is not yet at an end.
But parallel to this history another historical development in the natural gas arena is also taking
shape, albeit slowly and unassumingly.
This development is the growing importance of liquefied natural gas (LNG) in the global energy market, which both major energy consuming and producing countries have been trying to take part.
This is because during the 2000s, global LNG prospects were radically transformed. The combination of technological advancement, cost reduction in the supply chain and the insecurity in pipeline deliveries changed perceptions with regards to the LNG market.


As a result of these far-reaching developments it seems clear that the future of natural gas will be more diverse than now, with increased opportunities to export LNG all over the world. In this context, an April report by Pricewaterhouse Coopers suggests that LNG will account for one-third of all gas trade in 2010 and 62 percent by 2020.


This new and emerging fact is so accepted by energy experts, companies and particularly by major gas consuming and producing countries that these countries have all started investing heavily in the LNG field.


Sales of LNG installations and equipment such as regasification terminals and seaborne carrier vessels are increasing by the day as uncertainties in the global oil and gas market continue to haunt consumer countries.


For this reason many consumer countries are thinking and planning to support their present gas supplies with LNG deliveries. In this regard, the US is a good example because 45 LNG vessels are currently under construction in various countries to carry LNG from Qatar to the US.


Seeing an opportunity to strengthen its gas dominance further by LNG deliveries, Russia has been trying to assemble an LNG fleet of its own for some time. The Sovcomflot shipping company, whose CEO Igor Shulov is one of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s most trusted advisers, is leading this effort. In January 2007, Sovcomflot took the delivery of two LNG carrier vessels built by South Korea’s Hyundai Corporation to be followed by others. In fact, in partnership with Japan’s NYK Line, Sovcomflot has four LNG carrier vessels on order, two with South Korea’s Daewoo and two with Japan’s Mitsubishi.


When Russia’s LNG fleet is assembled and put into operation, five LNG carrier vessels are slated to handle LNG deliveries from the Sakhalin-2 oil and gas field in the Russian Far East. Of course this is a modest step in comparison with the global LNG deliveries but it clearly shows that Russia is determined to have an important role in global LNG trade and for this reason Russia’s gas giant Gazprom has changed its gas policy of not letting foreign companies to exploit gas fields recently and made a deal with France’s Total to operate Shtokman gas field jointly.

Turkish Weekly



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *