Drillers and investors who are getting pummeled in the threadbare LNG market might not be sold anymore on the idea that natural gas is the fuel of the future, but it’s not only the future: It’s the key to every major global energy strategy in the world right now.
It’s the key to dominion, and there’s every reason to be patient.
The second inaccuracy is that Qatar is not the world’s number one natural gas producer as the author mentioned in his article. It is number one producer and exporter of LNG and is currently expanding its LNG capacity from 76 million tonnes per year (mt/y) to 110 mt/y by 2023 in order to consolidate its position at the top spot for the foreseeable future against rising competition from Australia, the United States and Russia.
LNG and natural gas have many accolades. They are the kingpin of energy transition from hydrocarbons to renewables, also the largest fuel for electricity generation in the world and are both indispensable factors in helping to mitigate climate change. Even the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) has acknowledged that natural gas will still be accounting for 19% of global energy needs by 2040.
There is also a geopolitical dimension to natural gas and LNG. Partly because of natural gas, Russia has emerged as the world’s superpower of energy. It is also the world’s superpower of natural gas since it has the largest proven gas reserves in the globe and is also the largest exporter of gas. Furthermore, it accounts for 40% of the European Union’s (EUs) growing gas market and is now the largest supplier of natural gas to China which is the world’s largest energy market.
Russia’s supremacy in gas supplies will be further enhanced by the completion early next year of both the Nord Sream 2 and Turk Stream gas pipelines which will be bringing more Russian gas supplies to the EU under the Baltic and the Black Seas respectively. Russian position will be further enhanced by the Power of Siberia gas pipeline which was inaugurated two weeks ago and which will be supplying 38 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas annually to China for the next 30 years.
LNG exports have enabled Qatar to survive a harsh embargo imposed on it by Saudi-led alliance. Once the embargo is lifted, Qatar LNG supplies will help Saudi Arabia and UAE shift electricity generation from oil and gas currently to gas alone thus playing a major role in the diversification of both Saudi Arabia’s and UAE’s economies.
The shale gas revolution has enabled the United States to become a major LNG exporter and has also enabled it to cut domestically CO2 emissions and accelerate a shift from coal to gas in electricity generation.
Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Visiting Professor of Energy Economics at ESCP Europe Business School, London
Clean you your act, stop relying on pr and spin the age of satellite monitoring, and the internet gives proof to your self serving planet killing lies.
The word is out that gas flaring and leakage essentially cancel the above stated potential for NG to compete with coal, relative to climate. Some progress is being made on flaring, leakage and occasional wells gone wild, but maybe not enough to convince some governing bodies. Long-range policy decisions, like no more NG gas hookups new buildings, are being made, including in my neck of the woods.
Can we really be content to stay dependent on fossil fuel, to the extent that we are today?