Companies in the United States and Australia, two of the top global liquefied natural gas producers, have little spare capacity to offset lost supply after Qatar halted production and declared force majeure on shipments due to the conflict in the Middle East, according to Reuters calculations and industry analysts.
Qatar supplies around 20 per cent of the world's LNG but stopped production this week because it is unable to send tankers full of the gas through the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has said it would fire on any vessel that attempts to sail through the strait, and a vessel was damaged by a projectile on Wednesday as it sailed toward the shipping chokepoint at the entrance to the Persian Gulf.
The US is the world’s largest LNG producer, but its plants are running near full tilt and most cargoes are locked into long-term contracts. New US production that could come online soon is unlikely to exceed two billion cubic feet per day, far short of the 10 bcfd gap left by Qatar - equal to about 80 million tons per year.
“There is no massive capacity on the sidelines,” said Alex Munton, Director of Global Gas and LNG at research firm Rapidan Energy Group.
The Dutch TTF benchmark fell to $16.72 per mmBtu after hitting a three-year-high near $19 per mmBtu on Tuesday.
Second-largest US producer Venture Global has the most flexibility to help in the short term because it can sell cargoes on the spot market that it produces as it brings online a plant in Louisiana.
Venture Global has been selling two million tonnes per month in commissioning volumes on the spot market from its Plaquemines plant in Louisiana. That gives it more room to redirect cargoes, CEO Mike Sabel said during an earnings call on Monday.
Plaquemines is awaiting final sign-off from the US Department of Energy for additional expansion beyond its currently approved volume of 27.2 million tonnes per year. If that is received quickly, Venture Global could boost output by up to 7.2 million tonnes per annum, though that would account for just a fraction of the capacity lost in Qatar.
Shipping firm Poten Partners said on Tuesday that Venture Global accounted for more than half of the 80 cargoes of LNG sent from the US to the Middle East last year.
Venture Global declined further comment.
Another new US supply source, the Golden Pass LNG project - a joint venture between QatarEnergy and Exxon Mobil - is expected to begin initial production this month at a train with capacity for six million tonnes per annum. Golden Pass didn't immediately respond to a question about whether that could be used by Qatar to cover its shortfalls.
Leading US exporter Cheniere Energy last week began production from Train 5 of its Stage 3 expansion at Corpus Christi. The unit, which is relatively small, with capacity to produce 1.5 million tonnes per year, is expected to take about a month to reach full output. Most of that volume has been contracted out.
Cheniere told Reuters it was monitoring developments in the Middle East and will deliver on customer commitments.
Global gas consumption is around 400 billion cubic feet per day, energy analysts estimate. Roughly 55 bcfd of that is traded as LNG, with the US, Australia and Qatar accounting for about 60 per cent of global output, according to the International Gas Union. Most of that LNG is sold under long-term contracts.
Before halting production, Qatar supplied LNG to buyers in Europe and Asia. Australia, which ships around 11 bcfd, has few spot cargoes to plug the supply gap in Asia.
“There is almost no scope for pushing out additional LNG volumes from Australia as plants are run at full rates. Some LNG plant maintenance could be deferred to squeeze out up to three million tonns over the next six months, but that’s about it,” said MST Marquee analyst Saul Kavonic. Smaller producers also have limited room to increase flows. LNG Canada has capacity to produce up to two bcfd and is currently running at about 1.5 bcfd, LSEG data shows.
(Reporting by Curtis Williams in Houston and Scott DiSavino in New York; Editing by Nathan Crooks, Simon Webb David Gregorio)