The global trade in liquefied natural gas likely shrank last year due to
lower overall gas output, and gas producers will focus on meeting a
supply shortfall for the next couple of years, a senior BG Group PLC
(BG.LN) executive said Thursday.
Preliminary data show the volume of LNG changing hands
declined for the first time in the industry's history by 2.5 million
metric tons in 2012, compared with a 19-million-ton jump a year earlier,
Steve Hill, vice president of global LNG and oil marketing at BG Group,
said at the LNG Supplies for Asian Markets conference in Singapore.
BG Group is one of the world's largest suppliers of LNG.
According to its 2012 data book, it had contracted LNG supply of around
13 million tons a year.
He said higher gas output from some producers was offset by
production problems at other companies in Indonesia, Algeria, Malaysia,
Egypt and Yemen.
Analysts estimate the global LNG trade will grow from its
current size of 240 million tons to around 450 million tons by 2025.
LNG currently accounts for 10% of global natural gas
consumption, with a total of 18 exporting and 26 importing countries,
and around 365 ships for transportation.
However, global LNG supply is currently limited as no new
projects have started production and supply is expected to remain tight
until 2015, when new projects in Asia and Australia come online.
"In total, we see global LNG capacity growing by 8.4 million
tons to 277 million tons in 2013, and see even less growth of 4.4
million tons in 2014," BofA Merrill Lynch analysts said in a note.
"We expect production from existing gas fields to decline by
1.5 trillion cubic meters a year, meaning that new supply will actually
have to grow by 2.4 trillion cubic meters a year, which is a growth rate
of 9% a year, to cover demand growth and the decline in existing
production," Mr. Hill said.
He said BG Group expects demand to rise with as many as 30 more countries trying to import LNG.
BG also expects India, China, Japan and South Korea to become the world's top LNG importers by 2025.
Mr. Hill said around 22.4 million tons of LNG was diverted
from suppliers in the Atlantic basin to meet surging demand in the
Pacific basin in 2012, of which one-third was diverted by BG Group
alone.A