Written by Grzegorz Kaliszuk
World
energy market experts proclaimed last week the beginning of the end of
Gazprom’s monopoly in the European gas market. The reason for such an audacious
thesis was the first shipment of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from US state of
Louisiana, which arrived in the Portuguese port of Sines on April 26th2016.
The United States was
unable to export raw material for many years, but an oversupply in its internal
market has led to a significant reduction in prices and therefore resulted in
the deterioration of the financial condition of companies engaged in gas
extraction. Barack Obama's consent to export natural gas means there is a de
facto full mobilisation of all six American gas ports (three are still under
construction).
Cheniere, the US company which sold the gas to Lisbon, has already begun
co-operating with many European countries for some time (e.g. with the United
Kingdom’s BG Group, Spain’s Gas Natural and Portugal’s Galp Energía). The
delivery of US gas to Europe is outwardly received indifferently by Moscow.
However, in practice, this is actually the beginning of a complete change of
Europe’s “blue fuel” supply model. Alexander Medvedev, Gazprom's vice
president, has already announced a cost reduction (which means price
reduction), if the United States supplies cheaper gas to Europe than that which
Russia does. Lowering the price of liquefied gas below the one traditionally
supplied by pipelines is still difficult today, because the process of
liquefaction must be considered, as well as transportation and regasification.
However, given the rapidity of advancing production and transport technology
development, it is only a matter of time until this type of gas as well as
transportation costs become competitively priced.
It should be kept in mind that the US is very quickly becoming a global
player as an energy supplier, starting from its position as one of the largest
gas importers in the world. According to the International Energy Agency, gas
consumption will grow annually by 1.6 per cent in the foreseeable future. It is
essential to note that from 2007 until 2014 shale gas production increased
every year by more than 50 per cent in the US. It was the shale gas revolution
which flooded the United States with cheap gas, which led the American Congress
and president to agree on gas exportation.
This cannot be easy on Namietkina Street in Moscow (where Gazprom is
headquartered), because Russia meets more than 25 per cent of Europe’s demand
for natural gas. A strong player like the US, along with Russia’s political
opposition and many of the Kremlin’s actions, create a big challenge for
Russia’s monopoly. Gas is also supplied to Europe from Norway, Algeria and the
Middle East.
The European gas market has been so far cemented mainly due to a lack of
efficient alternative import technology. This fact has been used by Russia
again and again to firmly negotiate with European partners and rigidly stand
its ground. This lack of negotiating flexibility may turn out to currently be
very expensive for Moscow.
At the end of last year it was speculated that the first American LNG
would flow directly to the Klaipeda Lithuania gas terminal. It was to be the
US’s gesture towards the Baltic states which are almost entirely dependent on
Russian gas supplies. It happened otherwise, but this does not mean that
Klaipeda will not host a gas ship from the US in the near future.
Revolution on the LNG market
Gas ports are springing up all over the world. Australia, the US, Russia
and various of Middle Eastern states are the countries which mostly invest in
this activity. There are 30 countries operating in the LNG maritime transport
market (including Poland; the potential trans-shipment port in Świnoujście
handles five million tonnes, giving Poland a leading position in the region).
Today, Europe’s largest LNG importers are the following: the United Kingdom,
Spain, Turkey, France and Italy. The biggest supplier is Qatar, closely
followed by Algeria.
The volume of LNG global trade reached 250 million tonnes last year,
while the number of exporting countries increased to 19. The shipbuilding
industry benefits from the LNG market’s boom at the same time. Over 410
specialist units travel the world’s seas and oceans and another 150 are under
construction. Poland joined the group of countries involved in LNG exchange
formally on December 11th 2015 when the Świnoujście gasport welcomed Al Nuaman
– a Qatari ship which is the most modern of its kind in the world.
The road
from Qatar to Poland took three weeks and the load delivered in one vessel was
sufficient enough to cover two full nationwide statistical consumption winter
days. Investment in Świnoujście’s LNG terminal cost Polish taxpayers around one
billion euros (in comparison, the tunnel under the Martwa Wisła which opened in
Gdansk last week cost only 200 billion euros). Europe’s crude oil and natural
gas market’s current situation is one of the best investments the Polish
government has recently made.
The US LNG market’s increased activity is a clear signal to Russia that
the time of absolute monopoly in Europe has come to an end. Now is the time to
carefully observe and follow competitors’ steps. This is a considerable move
towards the market’s normalisation and the de-politicisation of investment
decisions such as Nord Stream and South Stream.
Grzegorz
Kaliszuk is an economic analyst with a PhD from the Warsaw School
of Economics. He is an author of over 80 articles devoted to Russia, the CIS
countries and energy issues and currently works for the Allianz Group.
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