| LNG
in Asia-Pacific
Within the Asia Pacific region, growth in LNG demand is strong
and expected to stay that way, rising from the almost 150 million
tons traded globally today to more than 300 million tons by 2015.
This demand is driven by the struggle to grow North American gas
reserves and production – for the past few years, unconventional
gas (CBM, silt/shale, coal) has been the only source of U.S. production
growth. Also, the growth, liberalization, and gradual commoditization
of a global LNG market in which the U.S. and European markets will
set prices.
Qatar will be a swing supplier, and arbitrage opportunities will
favor large portfolio players with widespread sources of supply
and captive shipping. Pipeline gas demand will mirror LNG demand
growth, but is more constrained by cross-border pricing and ownership
issues. Prospective pipeline projects to deliver gas from West and
East Siberia, Sakhalin, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan into northeast
Asia, and via the Trans-Asian system into southeast Asia, have been
discussed for more than a decade, but are hampered by infrastructure
costs, competition between importing countries, and (at least in
the case of northeast Asia) an absence of viable commercial frameworks
and pricing mechanisms.
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