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Friday / April 26.
 
HomeAlaska BusinessLNG Global Market Being Transformed without Alaska’s Gas

LNG Global Market Being Transformed without Alaska’s Gas

The U.S. is about to change the global LNG market forever.

When the first tanker carrying liquefied natural gas from shale fields leaves the Sabine Pass terminal in Louisiana in December, it will turn consumers into traders with more bargaining power. That will transform a market dominated by long-term contracts into one where spot trading gains prominence, similar to crude oil.

LNG Global Market Being Transformed without Alaska's Gas

Since the first LNG cargo went to the U.K. from Algeria under a long-term contract in 1964, buyers opted for guaranteed supply because the fuel was scarce. That’s changing because gas from the Eagle Ford and other fields will transform the U.S. into the third-biggest exporter by 2020. Spot trading will probably account for almost half of transactions by then, from 29 per cent last year, and LNG is poised to overtake iron ore as the most valuable commodity after oil.

“We see the U.S. as a major contributor to the development of the LNG spot market as the volumes start to ramp up,” Jamie Buckland, head of investor relations at GasLog Ltd. in London, which owns 22 LNG tankers, wrote in an email May 14. “There should be a lot more flexibility and you could see some buyers of U.S. volumes selling product on to others.”

Last week, the Energy Department gave Cheniere Energy Inc. final approval for the nation’s fifth major export terminal at Corpus Christi, Texas, which will ship the fuel from 2018.

See Full Story at Calgary Herald

 

LNG Global Market Being Transformed without Alaska's Gas

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